Iris
Are the structures with "in which", "which in" considered more formal than those ones with "where"? That's the house in which I grew up. That's the house which I grew up in. That's the house where I grew up.
Jan 19, 2014 9:45 AM
Answers · 8
1
I'm not sure that any of them would be considered more formal. Grammatically, I prefer the first one, the second ends with a preposition, which some people don't like, and the third is OK.
January 19, 2014
1
I would consider the sentences to be formal, less formal, and informal and completely natural, in the order you have written them.
January 19, 2014
Ugh! "...and respected!" Is there any way to EDIT comments/answers after posting them?
January 20, 2014
I prefer the third because it's shortest, it avoids prepositions, and "where" is for use with locations. I see this scenario as analogous to preferring "who" to "that" when referring to people -- pick the most specific word available for the job, especially with a word like "where", which is both commonly understood respected.
January 20, 2014
Yes, I know the rules. I suppose, your last sentence is the most common in spoken English. What about written English?
January 19, 2014
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