vaaad
please help me?????? Are these sentences correct?gramatically and used by people? Unit: 1) one of the parts INTO which a book is divided. 2) one of the parts which a book is divided INTO them.
Feb 17, 2012 8:08 PM
Answers · 5
Sentence #1 is the correct one, although many people would not say it that way in common usage. Like Tony said, sentence #2 is the way most people would say it in spoken English, if you remove the word "them".
February 17, 2012
These are sentence fragments. This means something must be added to make it a complete idea. Depending on what you add will change the meaning - so I am left guessing what you mean. But here I go: I read this information in a chapter, which is one of the parts in which a book is divided.
February 17, 2012
1) one of the parts INTO which a book is divided. 2) one of the parts which a book is divided INTO.
February 17, 2012
Sentence 1 is grammatically correct. Sentence 2 could be, if you removed the "them" but it still sounds weird. It would sound better if you took "which" out. For example: One of the parts a book is divided into.
February 17, 2012
None of it correct. I can’t get your thoughts.
February 17, 2012
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