John who developed new websites is very professional and adds to his work experiences.
Please check the sentence.
Can we say "adds to his work experience"?
You ask about "adds to his work experience", but in the original you wrote "work experience s ". The usual phrase is "work experience". e.
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You ask about "adds to his work experience", but in the original you wrote "work experiences". The usual phrase is "work experience".
The clause "who developed new websites" is presumably non-defining (i.e. not telling us which John is meant), and so should be in commas.
The mix of tenses ("developed ... adds") seems unnatural or hard to comprehend. What do you intend by thi