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Anonymous Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

[of] which

A question: When 'which' connects two sentences together, is there a hidden [of] before it.

For example:

Jenny had been very sick today when I called her, of which means I won't be visiting her tomorrow.

The table is made of wood, of which is from an old forest in Sweden.
  

Top answer

Anonymous When 'which' connects two sentences together, is there a hidden [of] before it. No. Anonymous Jenny had been very sick today when I called her, of which means I won't be visiting her tomorrow.

  • Anonymous When 'which' connects two sentences together, is there a hidden [of] before it.
  • No.
  • Anonymous Jenny had been very sick today when I called her, of which means I won't be visiting her tomorrow.
  • 'of' is wrong and must be deleted.
  • Anonymous The table is made of wood , of which is from an old forest in Sweden.
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1 Answers
0
AnonymousWhen 'which' connects two sentences together, is there a hidden [of] before it.
No.
AnonymousJenny had been very sick today when I called her, of which means I won't be visiting her tomorrow.
'of' is wrong and must be deleted.
AnonymousThe table is made of wood , of whic

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