Hello everyone.
I am an eager person to learn that is diverse to the needs of others.
This sentence is from this link https://eldercare.com/i-am-seeking-a-community-role-as-psw-an-engaged-enthusiastic-person-with-excellent-communication-skills-elder-care-hamilton-on
Does it mean that
I am a person who is eager to learn that is diverse to the needs of others.
or
I am a person to learn that is diverse to the needs of others and eager.
Which one? We discussed a topic similar to this one but I am not sure about this one again.
Thank you very much.
Jawel I am an eager person to learn that is diverse to the needs of others. It must be intended to mean this, but it is poorly written. As well as problems with the overall structure, plus misuse of "diverse", "that" grates for me.
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JawelI am an eager person to learn that is diverse to the needs of others.
It must be intended to mean this, but it is poorly written.
As well as problems with the overall structure, plus misuse of "diverse", "that" grates for me. I would use "who".
JawelThis sentence is from this link
I opened the link and read the "Seeking Work" posting. The sentence in question is not completely coherent in my opinion, and it should not be considered grammatical. The use of "diverse", for example, is clearly wrong.
You put yourself in a hopeless position trying to deduce the principles of English grammar thr