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Anonymous Posted 11 years ago
Vocabulary

Using "from" twice in a sentence

Hello! I wonder if using a word "from" twice in a sentence is correct, if an objective is long (consists of several words). Or had I better use it only once and make the second objective go after a comma?
Let me show it on an example:
The books which I thought of buying, come FROM the nearest and the most popular in my town bookshop and FROM an internet store.
OR:
The books which I thought of buying, come FROM the nearest and the most popular in my town bookshop, and an internet store.
Which one is correct? Thanks for help! Emotion: smile
  

Top answer

I'd use 'from' twice, and recast the sentence slightly. The books I thought of buying come from the nearest and most popular bookshop in my town and from an internet store.

  • I'd use 'from' twice, and recast the sentence slightly.
  • The books I thought of buying come from the nearest and most popular bookshop in my town and from an internet store.
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2 Answers
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I'd use 'from' twice, and recast the sentence slightly.

The books I thought of buying come from the nearest and most popular bookshop in my town and from an internet store.
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