0
English 1b3 Posted 16 years ago
Grammar

Relative Clause--During which

Any difference in meaning?

Is b not redundant?

I completed a course, during which I learned how to skip properly.

I completed a course, during which time I learned how to skip properly.

(I learned how to skip during which/a course)= time seems ungrammatical, yet I know it's not

Thanks
  

Top answer

Yes. I'd say "time" is unnecessary, redundant, and not required. You don't need it, and it doesn't add anything either.

  • Yes.
  • I'd say "time" is unnecessary, redundant, and not required.
  • You don't need it, and it doesn't add anything either.
  • Did I mention that it is redundant?
  • CJ
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
Yes. I'd say "time" is unnecessary, redundant, and not required. You don't need it, and it doesn't add anything either. Did I mention that it is redundant?

CJ
0
CalifJimYes. I'd say "time" is unnecessary, redundant, and not required. You don't need it, and it doesn't add anything either. Did I mention that it is redundant?

Related Questions