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Hanuman_2000 Posted 22 years ago
Grammar

What

Sir,

What you have learnt.

This sentence was written in a book.

This looks strange to me,why ?

1.There is know "?" mark at the end of sentence.

2.The sentence is introgative as I think,so verb should follow the question world "What".

I mean "What have you learnt?" is correct.


Please clear my doubt.

Thanks.
  

Top answer

' Otherwise, you are correct, Hanuman-- it should be written as a question; or, it should be part of a larger sentence, such as 'What you have learnt may be very important, but it cannot help me'.

  • ' Otherwise, you are correct, Hanuman-- it should be written as a question; or, it should be part of a larger sentence, such as 'What you have learnt may be very important, but it cannot help me'.
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1 Answers
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If it is correct, it could only be an answer, to a previous question:

'What do you want to know about life?'
'What you have learnt.'

Otherwise, you are correct, Hanuman-- it should be written as a question; or, it should be part of a larger sentence, such as 'What you have learnt may be very important, but it cannot help me'.

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