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Snarf Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

Where Comma

A. Jonathan will meet you at the hotel where the other workers plan to gather.

B. Jonathan will meet you at the hotel, where the other workers plan to gather.

One has a comma, one doesn't. Are they both right? Do they mean something slightly different with versus without it?

Thank you.
  

Top answer

Yes, both are grammatically correct and they have different meanings. Jonathan will meet you at the hotel where the other workers plan to gather. (The hotel is identified.

  • Yes, both are grammatically correct and they have different meanings.
  • Jonathan will meet you at the hotel where the other workers plan to gather.
  • (The hotel is identified.
  • It is the one where the others workers are gathering.
  • ) Jonathan will meet you at the hotel, where the other workers plan to gather.
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2 Answers
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Yes, both are grammatically correct and they have different meanings.

Jonathan will meet you at the hotel where the other workers plan to gather. (The hotel is identified. It is the one where the others workers are gathering. It is not any other hotel.)

Jonathan will meet you at the hotel, where the other workers plan to gather. (You already know the hotel, but added informat
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Yes, that's clear. Thanks very much.

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