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Anonymous Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

That and which

Hi. Would you say the interpretation of the sentential situations I laid out are correct?

Sentence in reference:

They have raised the level of grades they are employed in.

I think the two below mean roughly the same (if I am not mistaken). Is putting the phrase "in that" in no. 1 is correct?

1. They have raised the level of grades that (in that??) they are employed in.



2. They have raised the level of grades in which they are employed.



  

Top answer

They have raised the level of grades that they are employed in . -- OK They have raised the level of grades in that they are employed. -- Wrong They have raised the level of grades in which they are employed.

  • They have raised the level of grades that they are employed in .
  • -- OK They have raised the level of grades in that they are employed.
  • -- Wrong They have raised the level of grades in which they are employed.
  • -- OK
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1 Answers
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They have raised the level of grades that they are employed in. -- OK

They have raised the level of grades in that they are employed. -- Wrong



They have raised the level of grades in which they are employed. -- OK

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