0
Lawn2llawn2 Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

in which to

Hey I have a question about "in which to" usage.

Is it okay to say " I want to apply for a Business Development Manager position in which to take challenges in the real business life"

Is there any guidance where and how to use "in which to"?

Thanks

Liya
  

Top answer

Liya, the problem is (X) 'take challenges', not 'in which to'. I want to apply for a Business Development Manager position in which I can meet the challenges of real business.

  • Liya, the problem is (X) 'take challenges', not 'in which to'.
  • I want to apply for a Business Development Manager position in which I can meet the challenges of real business.
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.

3 Answers
0
Liya, the problem is (X) 'take challenges', not 'in which to'.

I want to apply for a Business Development Manager position in which I can meet the challenges of real business.
0
So, "in which to" isn't okay? But I read somewhere on the internet " a company in which to live and grow". Honestly, I think the latter sounds okay, but not my first sentence, but I dont know why. Am I right? Can you explain why if you happen to think the same as what I think?

Thanks a lot

Liya
0
I have rephrased your sentence to make it a little more personable, but you can use 'in which to meet the challenges' if you wish.

Related Questions