0
Nananara Posted 5 years ago
Grammar

I would like to know whether 'her' can refer to 'Romilda' and 'he' can be included in one of 'every man.'

In the following sentence, I would like to know whether 'her' can refer to 'Romilda' and 'he' can be included in one of 'every man.'

At which of the parties that he will invite Romilda to would every man be fond of her?

(Ron is going to join some parties. Due to a pesky rule he has to invite a girl to them. He decided to invite Romilda Vene, but she had plotted to make every man take a love potion in a party.)


Thank you.

  

Top answer

' Yes, but it is a very awkward and hard-to-read sentence. Is it a sentence that you wrote yourself, or one that you read somewhere?

  • ' Yes, but it is a very awkward and hard-to-read sentence.
  • Is it a sentence that you wrote yourself, or one that you read somewhere?
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

2 Answers
0
Nananara I would like to know whether 'her' can refer to 'Romilda' and 'he' can be included in one of 'every man.'

Yes, but it is a very awkward and hard-to-read sentence. Is it a sentence that you wrote yourself, or one that you read somewhere?

0

Your sentence is clunky.

At which party, where she was Ron's date, would Romilda try to give out her love potions?

Romilda Vane tried to give one of the Weasleys' love potions to Harry Potter by spiking Gillywater and a box of Chocolate Cauldrons. Having been warned by Hermione, Harry refused the Gillywater when Romilda offered it to him, but was forced to accept her c

Related Questions