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Panda blue 483 Posted 5 years ago
Grammar

Correct usage.

a) The 1939 version of The Wizard of Oz is very memorable, particularly for actress Margaret Hamilton's sinister villain The Wicked Witch of the West.

b) Dorothy must face many obstacles on her journey through Oz including facing off against the film's main antagonist and villain, The Wicked Witch of the West.


Would a) be correct as viewing 'Wicked Witch of the West' as restrictive versus b)?


In the sense, those few unfamiliar with the story may need to confirm exactly which villain is portrayed, versus b) where we are aware specifically of a 'main antagonist' and therefore non-restrictive.

  

Top answer

panda blue 483 Would a) be correct as viewing 'Wicked Witch of the West' as restrictive versus b)? Yes. panda blue 483 In the sense, those few unfamiliar with the story may need to confirm exactly which villain is portrayed, versus b) where we are aware specifically of a 'main antagonist' and therefore non-restrictive.

  • panda blue 483 Would a) be correct as viewing 'Wicked Witch of the West' as restrictive versus b)?
  • Yes.
  • panda blue 483 In the sense, those few unfamiliar with the story may need to confirm exactly which villain is portrayed, versus b) where we are aware specifically of a 'main antagonist' and therefore non-restrictive.
  • It is not necessary in (b) that we already know of a "main antagonist" (though we may).
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1 Answers
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panda blue 483Would a) be correct as viewing 'Wicked Witch of the West' as restrictive versus b)?

Yes.

panda blue 483In the sense, those few unfamiliar with the story may need to confirm exactly which villain is portrayed, versus b) where we are aware specifically of a 'main antagonist' and therefore non-restrictive.

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