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Fire1 Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

Preposition + which

“In the sense that babies are programmed for babies to learn easily, it's no wonder that even adults master any language as quickly as possible. On which, someone could insist differently, through.”.


Q1) Is it correct to use "On which" like in the case above?


Q2) In "On which", what does "which" refer to?


Does "which" refer to the entire previous sentence "In the sense that babies are programmed for babies to learn easily, it's no wonder that even adults master any language as quickly as possible"?

  

Top answer

fire1 “In the sense that babies are programmed for babies to learn easily, it's no wonder that even adults master any language as quickly as possible. ”. The first sentence makes no sense to me.

  • fire1 “In the sense that babies are programmed for babies to learn easily, it's no wonder that even adults master any language as quickly as possible.
  • ”.
  • The first sentence makes no sense to me.
  • fire1 Q1) Is it correct to use "On which" like in the case above?
  • Yes (relatively unusual style).
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1 Answers
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fire1“In the sense that babies are programmed for babies to learn easily, it's no wonder that even adults master any language as quickly as possible. On which, someone could insist differently, though.”.

The first sentence makes no sense to me.

fire1Q1) Is it correct to use "On which" l

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