Recherche parmi différents professeurs en Anglais…
Sun
Why is "from where" instead of "from which" here? Can you help me with that? "After the water has passed through the turbines, it continues its journey through a pipe called tailrace, from where it is then released back into the river on the opposite side of the dam" I guess it should be "from which" in a non-restrictive attributive clause
23 mars 2023 12:37
Réponses · 5
2
Because it's just the place where it comes from - it's not distinguishing between different pipes. It answers the question: Where is the water released back into the river from? Not: Which pipe does it come from.
23 mars 2023
1
I feel that "from where" is slightly incorrect and that "from which" is better. But it depends on whether a pipe feels like a "thing" or a "place." If it's a thing, we would say "which," if it's a place, we would say "where." We could complicate the question further by asking if we could say "from whence!"
24 mars 2023
1
"From which" is completely correct and is the superior choice. An explicit choice is not required in order to use "which". Other examples: "That is a book from which I have learned a lot." "That is a city in which many crimes occur." ("where" can also be used)
23 mars 2023
1
I agree with you actually. But I don't think "from where" is incorrect. I think both are acceptable, but I slightly prefer "from which".
23 mars 2023
"From where" is the correct choice and not "from which" because it is talking about a place here. Which is used to either distinguish between two things or as a pronoun. Neither are applicable here.
24 mars 2023
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