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Lieiti Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

To which, for which, for whom?

Hi all,

I'm having a hard time figuring out if this sentence grammatically correct. "Helping cult victims is also a top priority, to which we offer care, guidance, and various kinds of support."

Much thanks for the help.
  

Top answer

I don't think it's right. It seems to be saying that they offer care etc. to "helping cult victims", whereas I presume they actually offer it to the victims.

  • I don't think it's right.
  • It seems to be saying that they offer care etc.
  • to "helping cult victims", whereas I presume they actually offer it to the victims.
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4 Answers
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I don't think it's right. It seems to be saying that they offer care etc. to "helping cult victims", whereas I presume they actually offer it to the victims.
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Thanks GPY for the quick response. Yes, you are correct. The care etc. is offered to the victims in need of it.

Could you perhaps give me an example of how you would write it properly to make it clear with proper grammar?

Thanks again.
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Helping cult victims is also a top priority, and we offer victims care, guidance, and various kinds of support.
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Thanks for the help.

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