Difference between “which” and “, which”?
Is there a difference between the following two sentences?
She read the document which upset me.
She read the document, which upset me.
commas
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Is there a difference between the following two sentences?
She read the document which upset me.
She read the document, which upset me.
commas
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atlas is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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Is there a difference between the following two sentences?
She read the document which upset me.
She read the document, which upset me.
commas
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atlas is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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Is there a difference between the following two sentences?
She read the document which upset me.
She read the document, which upset me.
commas
commas
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edited 14 hours ago
A Lambent Eye
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76317
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asked 16 hours ago
atlas
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She read the document which upset me - suggests that the document included something that upset you. In this case, I would use "She read the document that upset me" because "that" is a restrictive word, which means that it provides essential information about the noun "document" and is used without a comma.
She read the document, which upset me - suggests that the fact that she read the document upset you.
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I agree with MihaelaP
In terms of grammar:
She read the document which upset me. ('which upset me' is adjectival to 'document')
She read the document, which upset me. (', which upset me' is adverbial to 'read')
Note that American English makes a greater distinction between 'that' and 'which' than British English.
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2 Answers
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2 Answers
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She read the document which upset me - suggests that the document included something that upset you. In this case, I would use "She read the document that upset me" because "that" is a restrictive word, which means that it provides essential information about the noun "document" and is used without a comma.
She read the document, which upset me - suggests that the fact that she read the document upset you.
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She read the document which upset me - suggests that the document included something that upset you. In this case, I would use "She read the document that upset me" because "that" is a restrictive word, which means that it provides essential information about the noun "document" and is used without a comma.
She read the document, which upset me - suggests that the fact that she read the document upset you.
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She read the document which upset me - suggests that the document included something that upset you. In this case, I would use "She read the document that upset me" because "that" is a restrictive word, which means that it provides essential information about the noun "document" and is used without a comma.
She read the document, which upset me - suggests that the fact that she read the document upset you.
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She read the document which upset me - suggests that the document included something that upset you. In this case, I would use "She read the document that upset me" because "that" is a restrictive word, which means that it provides essential information about the noun "document" and is used without a comma.
She read the document, which upset me - suggests that the fact that she read the document upset you.
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edited 12 hours ago
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answered 16 hours ago
MihaelaP
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I agree with MihaelaP
In terms of grammar:
She read the document which upset me. ('which upset me' is adjectival to 'document')
She read the document, which upset me. (', which upset me' is adverbial to 'read')
Note that American English makes a greater distinction between 'that' and 'which' than British English.
add a comment |
I agree with MihaelaP
In terms of grammar:
She read the document which upset me. ('which upset me' is adjectival to 'document')
She read the document, which upset me. (', which upset me' is adverbial to 'read')
Note that American English makes a greater distinction between 'that' and 'which' than British English.
add a comment |
I agree with MihaelaP
In terms of grammar:
She read the document which upset me. ('which upset me' is adjectival to 'document')
She read the document, which upset me. (', which upset me' is adverbial to 'read')
Note that American English makes a greater distinction between 'that' and 'which' than British English.
I agree with MihaelaP
In terms of grammar:
She read the document which upset me. ('which upset me' is adjectival to 'document')
She read the document, which upset me. (', which upset me' is adverbial to 'read')
Note that American English makes a greater distinction between 'that' and 'which' than British English.
answered 12 hours ago
chasly from UK
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22.8k13068
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