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Rommel Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

Is this sentence using ‘whose trustworthiness she seriously doubts’ acceptable? There should really be no comma after ‘co-workers,’ right? Which should be used: ‘limits’ or ‘limitations’?

Is this sentence using ‘whose trustworthiness she seriously doubts’ acceptable? There should really be no comma after ‘co-workers,’ right? Which should be used: ‘limits’ or ‘limitations’?


Vincent has advised Vicky to set reasonable (limits, limitations) in sharing her personal experiences with her co-workers whose trustworthiness she seriously doubts.

  

Top answer

Is this sentence using ‘whose trustworthiness she seriously doubts’ acceptable? Yes There should really be no comma after ‘co-workers,’ right? no comma suggests that she has doubts about all her co-workers.

  • Is this sentence using ‘whose trustworthiness she seriously doubts’ acceptable?
  • Yes There should really be no comma after ‘co-workers,’ right?
  • no comma suggests that she has doubts about all her co-workers.
  • Which should be used: ‘limits’ or ‘limitations’?
  • limits
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1 Answers
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Is this sentence using ‘whose trustworthiness she seriously doubts’ acceptable? Yes

There should really be no comma after ‘co-workers,’ right? no comma suggests that she has doubts about all her co-workers.

Which should be used: ‘limits’ or ‘limitations’? limits

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