0
Jawel Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

It is about a relative clause

Hello everyone,

I have a sentence like "I was born in Paris in 1992 and I had lots of nice experiences in Paris". How can I combine them with relative clause?

1-) I was born in Paris in 1992, where I had nice experiences.

2-) I was born in Paris, where I had nice experiences ,in 1992.

Which one is more natural?

I think, the first one is correct because the second one seems that I had nice experiences in 1992. But I don't mean it.

Thank you all in advance.

  

Top answer

eg I was born in 1992 in Paris, where I had lots of nice experiences.

  • eg I was born in 1992 in Paris, where I had lots of nice experiences.
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

eg I was born in 1992 in Paris, where I had lots of nice experiences.

0
JawelI think, the first one is correct because the second one seems that I had nice experiences in 1992. But I don't mean it.

You are right, and it is obvious that 'where' goes back to Paris not 1992.


You could also put your time expression before the place (as in Clive's example):


I was born in 1992 in Paris, where I had a lot of

Related Questions