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Tara2 Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

Which/who

do you think both the sentences work?
(1) If people of goodwill ,which is the overwhelming majority of Americans, work together, these are problems we can solve.
(2) If people of goodwill ,who are the overwhelming majority of Americans, work together, these are problems we can solve.

If so, what's the difference in meaning? Is that a relative clause?

  

Top answer

Tara2 goodwill , which goodwill , who No, no, no! You know this. The comma is placed thus: goodwill, which goodwill, who Tara2 D o you think both the sentences work?

  • Tara2 goodwill , which goodwill , who No, no, no!
  • You know this.
  • The comma is placed thus: goodwill, which goodwill, who Tara2 D o you think both the sentences work?
  • No.
  • 'people' requires 'who'.
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1 Answers
0
Tara2goodwill ,which
goodwill ,who

No, no, no! You know this.

The comma is placed thus:

goodwill, which
goodwill, who

Tara2Do you think both the sentences work?

No. 'people' requires 'who'.

CJ

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