He's free. He can fly where he wants.
He's free. He can fly wherever he wants.
Does "wherever" indicate a destination more than "where"?
It's not possible to say "He can fly where to he wants", right?
anonymous He's free. He can fly where he wants. He's free.
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anonymousHe's free. He can fly where he wants.
He's free. He can fly wherever he wants.
Both are OK, but the first will be taken to mean the second. It's better to write the second one.
anonymousDoes "wherever" indicate a destination more than "where"?
It could.
'fly wherever he wants' means 'f