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Rizan Malik Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

John is a doctor, who loves his profession

Consider this sentence, please:

1) John is a doctor, who loves his profession.

Does "who" = "John", the subject of the main clause Or "who" = "a doctor", the complement of the main clause, = "John", since "a doctor" is "John" Or "who" = "a doctor" (doctors in general, not just John)?

  

Top answer

Rizan Malik 1) John is a doctor, who loves his profession. This sentence isn't satisfactory. "John is a doctor who loves his profession" would be OK.

  • Rizan Malik 1) John is a doctor, who loves his profession.
  • This sentence isn't satisfactory.
  • "John is a doctor who loves his profession" would be OK.
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1 Answers
0
Rizan Malik1) John is a doctor, who loves his profession.

This sentence isn't satisfactory. "John is a doctor who loves his profession" would be OK.

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