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Anythingabove720 Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

Confusion with the use of Which and that.

Can anyone explain where to use which and where to use that. I read few things on net but I am still confused.

Also I need some documentation on use/parallelism involved in more ... than comparisons, specially when ellipsis comes into picture - Like how to figure out if verb and nouns are in sync on either side of than.

Come On Grammar Gurus, please help me out. I am preparing for GMAT and these two thing have become bane of my life.

Thanks

Sumeet
  

Top answer

Use that for restrictive (defining) clauses only; use which anywhere (though that is often preferred for defining clauses). ). )

  • Use that for restrictive (defining) clauses only; use which anywhere (though that is often preferred for defining clauses).
  • ).
  • )
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1 Answers
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Use that for restrictive (defining) clauses only; use which anywhere (though that is often preferred for defining clauses).

Verbs will be parallel if they take the same form (-ing and -ing, for instance)-- but I fail to see that they would appear often in a more...than comparison (She is more running than jogging-- ?). Nouns are automatica

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