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Anonymous Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

He talked rudely in the meeting, for which he was criticized very much.

I'd be happy if someone would answer my question. Thanks in advance.

Are the following sentences both right? If so, what's the difference?

A: He talked rudely in the meeting, for which he was criticized very much.

B: He talked rudely in the meeting for which he was criticized very much. (no comma)
  

Top answer

A - he was criticized for talking rudely. B - the meeting was criticized.

  • A - he was criticized for talking rudely.
  • B - the meeting was criticized.
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1 Answers
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A - he was criticized for talking rudely.

B - the meeting was criticized.

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