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Anonymous Posted 8 years ago
Vocabulary

A place where people who come here...

“Mostly, these are just not-very-thinly veiled ways of people saying ‘I don’t want them in my backyard’. Well, I do,” wrote Craig Borland back then. “I want Bute to be a place where people who come here with little more than the clothes they are standing in can feel safe and at home.” (The Guardian.)

Is a place where people who come here with little more than the clothes they are standing in a noun phrase in the passage above?

  

Top answer

" is not logically formed. In normal reading this might be overlooked.

  • " is not logically formed.
  • In normal reading this might be overlooked.
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1 Answers
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Yes, but strictly speaking "a place where people who come here ..." is not logically formed. In normal reading this might be overlooked.

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