0
Gaga4Grammar Posted 16 years ago
Grammar

Which?

In the following sentence, how is "which" used? Is it a noun-clause marker or a relative pronoun?

The CEO has not decided which of the two strategies he should accept/
  

Top answer

Gaga4Grammar In the following sentence, how is "which" used? Is it a noun-clause marker or a relative pronoun? The CEO has not decided which of the two strategies he should accept/ Here, 'which' is an interrogative word marking an 'open interrogative content clause'.

  • Gaga4Grammar In the following sentence, how is "which" used?
  • Is it a noun-clause marker or a relative pronoun?
  • The CEO has not decided which of the two strategies he should accept/ Here, 'which' is an interrogative word marking an 'open interrogative content clause'.
  • e.
  • there's no noun being modified by the clause).
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.

1 Answers
0
Gaga4Grammar
In the following sentence, how is "which" used? Is it a noun-clause marker or a relative pronoun?

The CEO has not decided which of the two strategies he should accept/

Here, 'which' is an interrogative word marking an 'open interrogative content clause'. You can tell it's not a relative pronoun because there's no r

Related Questions