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Ann225 Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

At the rate

"They should have a a special room where they would keep all their medication at the rate they buy it."

I came across this sentence on the internet and I can't help but wonder if something is missing.

Shouldn't it be:

"They should have a a special room where they would keep all their medication at the rate at which they buy it."?

The writer is suggesting that they buy so much medication that they should set aside a room only for that.

Thank you.

  

Top answer

Whether it's with or without "at which" (both are correct), the phrase "at the rate (at which) they buy it" doesn't make a lot of sense. 'rate' suggests speed. Is it supposed to be saying that as soon as they receive shipments of medication they should store them in the special room?

  • Whether it's with or without "at which" (both are correct), the phrase "at the rate (at which) they buy it" doesn't make a lot of sense.
  • 'rate' suggests speed.
  • Is it supposed to be saying that as soon as they receive shipments of medication they should store them in the special room?
  • It doesn't seem necessary or relevant to say that, given the rest of the sentence.
  • They should have a special room where they store all their medications (as soon as they receive them).
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1 Answers
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Whether it's with or without "at which" (both are correct), the phrase "at the rate (at which) they buy it" doesn't make a lot of sense. 'rate' suggests speed. Is it supposed to be saying that as soon as they receive shipments of medication they should store them in the special room? It doesn't seem necessary or relevant to say that, given the rest of the sentence.

They shou

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