ChristinaDing
the use of WHEN in Attributive Clauses The book was written in1946,since WHEN the education system has witnessed great changes. 'Since' should be followed by a noun while in attributive clauses 'when' is used to refer to an adverb. Should 'when' in this sentence be replaced by 'which'? Thanks.
7 de feb. de 2012 8:14
Respuestas · 5
2
This sentence is correct. You could rewrite is as 'since which time', but not just 'since which' as that doesn't make sense.
7 de febrero de 2012
It seems to me that “when” in the sentence is used as a pronoun, that is it takes the place of a noun and refers to something earlier in the text (its “antecedent”). It carries the meaning “which time” and refers to “1946.” I customarily say “since which time.”
9 de febrero de 2012
Check this out, particularly pay attention to item 8 and 9: http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/when
7 de febrero de 2012
Well the thing is, if you look it up in a dictionary, it can be a (pro)noun. When it comes to the W family, yes, I gotta admit it is sure a mess. :)
7 de febrero de 2012
No, the sentence is correct as it is. When in this case refers to the phrase "in 1946" which functions as a temporal adverbial/ adverbial for time. Therefore, it is not an adverb, but a prepositional phrase which still has the same role as an adverb.
7 de febrero de 2012
¿No has encontrado las respuestas?
¡Escribe tus preguntas y deja que los hablantes nativos te ayuden!