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Contiluo Posted 16 years ago
Grammar

There is

Which is acceptable, (1) or (2) ?

(1) The cat has a big hole on its stomach.

(2) There is a big hole on the cat's stomach.
  

Top answer

Usually a hole in "in" something, not "on" something. But I don't really understand what you're trying to say. What kind of hole are you talking about?

  • Usually a hole in "in" something, not "on" something.
  • But I don't really understand what you're trying to say.
  • What kind of hole are you talking about?
  • Is the cat injured?
  • Has the cat been shot?
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3 Answers
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Usually a hole in "in" something, not "on" something. But I don't really understand what you're trying to say. What kind of hole are you talking about? Is the cat injured? Has the cat been shot? I'm worried about this cat!
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The original sentence is as written.

"The cat was badly wounded, for its belly was pierced through by an arrow."

Someone writes the sentence as: The cat has a hole in its stomach. I just don't know how to revise it in a natural way.
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contiluoThe cat has a hole in its stomach.
This is fine, as far as grammar. (It's not so fine for the cat.)
Your original sentences are also okay if you change "on" to "in."

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