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Anonymous Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

Which

I've come to collect the camera which I lost yesterday, and which I heard had been handed in.

Can both relative pronouns "which" be omitted in the above sentence?
  

Top answer

Anonymous Can both relative pronouns "which" be omitted in the above sentence? Only the first one can be omitted if you wish to omit pronouns alone. You can, however, do this: I've come to collect the camera I lost yesterday and heard had been handed in.

  • Anonymous Can both relative pronouns "which" be omitted in the above sentence?
  • Only the first one can be omitted if you wish to omit pronouns alone.
  • You can, however, do this: I've come to collect the camera I lost yesterday and heard had been handed in.
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1 Answers
0
AnonymousCan both relative pronouns "which" be omitted in the above sentence?
Only the first one can be omitted if you wish to omit pronouns alone. You can, however, do this:

I've come to collect the camera I lost yesterday and heard had been handed in.

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