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This is my understanding about the usage of that and which:
The branches of the tree, a magnificent one, ... -> in this 'a magnificent one' refers to the tree and not to 'The branches of the tree'.
The branches of the tree that were cut down last week... -> in this that refers to 'The branches of the tree' and not to 'tree'
The branches of the tree that was cut down last week... -> in this that refers to 'tree' and not to 'The branches of the tree'
The branches of the tree, which was cut down last week,... -> in this which refers to 'the tree' and not to 'The branches of the tree'
Please correct me if I am wrong.
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This is my understanding about the usage of that and which:
The branches of the tree, a magnificent one, ... -> in this 'a magnificent one' refers to the tree and not to 'The branches of the tree'. Right. Because "a magnificient one" is singular and it can only refer to "tree"
The branches of the tree that were cut down last week... -> in this that refers to 'The branches of the tree' and not to 'tree' Right. Because "were" is plural and can only refer to "branches".
The branches of the tree that was cut down last week... -> in this that refers to 'tree' and not to 'The branches of the tree' Right. "was" is singular and can only refer to "tree"
The branches of the tree, which was cut down last week,... -> in this which refers to 'the tree' and not to 'The branches of the tree' Right. "was" is singular and can only refer to "tree"
This topic has been closed and archived due to inactivity or violation of community quality standards. No more replies are possible here.
Where to now? Join ongoing discussions on thousands of quality questions in our Verbal Questions Forum
Still interested in this question? Check out the "Best Topics" block above for a better discussion on this exact question, as well as several more related questions.