0
Cboutin3 Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

Should I use "where" or "in which"?

Supplanting himself in the aftermath of a battle "where/in which" the dragonarmies destroyed the resistance group and a force of elves, Eben encountered the group of adventurers known as the Heroes of the Lance.
  

Top answer

You may see people using either in cases like this. In my opinion "in which" is more precise. "dragon armies" should be two words (unless "dragonarmy" is a name invented for this story).

  • You may see people using either in cases like this.
  • In my opinion "in which" is more precise.
  • "dragon armies" should be two words (unless "dragonarmy" is a name invented for this story).
  • "supplant" means "replace/supersede".
  • I can't exactly see how one can supplant oneself.
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.

1 Answers
0
You may see people using either in cases like this. In my opinion "in which" is more precise.

"dragon armies" should be two words (unless "dragonarmy" is a name invented for this story).

"supplant" means "replace/supersede". I can't exactly see how one can supplant oneself.

Related Questions