0
Tuvalet Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

Where/which

Hi,

Is that a photograph of the church ? You got married there.

Normally I should write it like this.

Is that a photograph of the church where you got married.

But when I try to use it with "which"
I feel like i should use it with a preposition.

But there is no preposition.

So if i write

Is that a photograph of the church which you got married.

Instead of

Is that a photograph of the church in which you got married.

Would it be correct ?

Or are both of them correct ?

Thanks in advance.
  

Top answer

tuvalet So if i write Is that a photograph of the church which you got married. That is not correct. It's like writing: You got married church.

  • tuvalet So if i write Is that a photograph of the church which you got married.
  • That is not correct.
  • It's like writing: You got married church.
  • tuvalet Is that a photograph of the church in which you got married.
  • It's like writing: You got married in the church.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

3 Answers
0
tuvaletSo if i write
Is that a photograph of the church which you got married.
That is not correct.
It's like writing:

You got married church.
tuvaletIs that a photograph of the church in which you got married.
It's like writing:

You got married in the church.
0
Thank you very much.
0
tuvaletwhen I try to use it with "which"I feel like I should use it with a preposition.
Right. To do that, you have to make a little change like this:

Is that a photograph of the church? You got married there in it.

Now I think you can see how we get Is that a photograph

Related Questions