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JJDouglas Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

"For which" or just "which"?

Hi,

Would "for which" or just "which" be best in this example. I am worried that just using "which" may cause some ambiguity.

"I assisted in filming a promotional video for the company, for which I was then put in charge of editing."
  

Top answer

This is far better: I assisted in filming a promotional video for the company, and afterwards I was put in charge of editing it.

  • This is far better: I assisted in filming a promotional video for the company, and afterwards I was put in charge of editing it.
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2 Answers
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This is far better:

I assisted in filming a promotional video for the company, and afterwards I was put in charge of editing it.
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OK, thank you. That does read better.

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