目前共有2篇帖子。 字體大小:較小 - 100% (默認)▼  內容轉換:不轉換▼
 
點擊 回復
173 1
Question: Which of these sentences is correct?
大魔導士 十七級
1樓 發表于:2024-9-26 14:52
The original link: https://forum.thefreedictionary.com/postst265848_of-whom.aspx


Which are correct:

1) I had a chance to talk to Paul Newman, meeting whom was always delightful.
2) I talked to an actor meeting whom was always delightful.

3) I had a chance to talk to Paul Newman, the meeting of whom was always delightful.
4) I talked to an actor the meeting of whom was always delightful.

Gratefully,
Navi

大魔導士 十七級
2樓 發表于:2024-9-26 14:52
As far as I know, these sentences can be written as:

"I had a chance to talk to Paul Newman, whose meetings were always delightful."

Whose is a possessive relative pronoun and "whose meetings were always delightful" is a relative clause modifying Paul Newman.


I cannot relate to any of the syntaxes that I know of for all four sentences, even though "I had a chance to talk to Paul Newman, the meeting of whom was always delightful" looks familiar.

Maybe Audiendus, Dragonspeaker, and Thar can shed some light on this.

I look forward to their replies.

Thanks
brp7
 

回復帖子

內容:
用戶名: 您目前是匿名發表
驗證碼:
(快捷鍵:Ctrl+Enter)
 

本帖信息

點擊數:173 回複數:1
評論數: ?
作者:圆环之理
最後回復:圆环之理
最後回復時間:2024-9-26 14:52
 
©2010-2025 Purasbar Ver2.0
除非另有聲明,本站採用共享創意姓名標示-相同方式分享 3.0 Unported許可協議進行許可。