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Anonymous Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Bases himself in

The first one is correct? Is there any context where the second sentence could be used and be correct?

He is based in two countries.

He bases himself in two countries.


Thanks

  

Top answer

I would say both can be used. Assuming that a person can really be based in two countries, they are both grammatically correct. The former is the more common version but the latter is acceptable too if we're discussing him in the active voice in the present tense.

  • I would say both can be used.
  • Assuming that a person can really be based in two countries, they are both grammatically correct.
  • The former is the more common version but the latter is acceptable too if we're discussing him in the active voice in the present tense.
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1 Answers
0

I would say both can be used.

Assuming that a person can really be based in two countries, they are both grammatically correct. The former is the more common version but the latter is acceptable too if we're discussing him in the active voice in the present tense.

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