Henrycome
where would you like to visit? Is this sentence correct? Grammar books told me "where" is an adverb, which means "prep. + a place" in wh-questions. e.g. "where are you going?" But, "where would you like to visit?" Is this sentence correct? Because "visit where" means "visit+ prep. +a place." In "visit a place" , visit isn't followed by an adverb. " I am confused. Please help me, many thanks.
Jun 23, 2017 4:02 AM
Answers · 2
2
I am not sure of the correct way to analyze the grammar, but "Where would you like to visit" is grammatical and very natural-sounding English. Other similar examples that are grammatical and natural: Where is my car? Where are you living now? Where did you go to school? Where did you go on vacation?
June 23, 2017
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