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Claudia77 Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

Relating "it" to a noun

"Have a mystical location in mind? We may already have a map with it for sale. If not, you will have to imagine it and create your own route."

Please, in the above sentence, the first "it" ("with it") relates to "mystical location", but what about the second "it" (imagine it)? Does it relate to location or map?

Also, "if not" relates to having a map or having a location in mind?

  

Top answer

Claudia77 Please, in the above sentence, the first "it" ("with it") relates to "mystical location", but what about the second "it" (imagine it)? Does it relate to location or map? *** only knows.

  • Claudia77 Please, in the above sentence, the first "it" ("with it") relates to "mystical location", but what about the second "it" (imagine it)?
  • Does it relate to location or map?
  • *** only knows.
  • The whole thing doesn't make any sense to me.
  • Claudia77 Also, "if not" relates to having a map or having a location in mind?
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1 Answers
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Claudia77Please, in the above sentence, the first "it" ("with it") relates to "mystical location", but what about the second "it" (imagine it)? Does it relate to location or map?

*** only knows. The whole thing doesn't make any sense to me.

Claudia77Also, "if not" relates to having a map or having a location in mind?

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