Thursday, March 19, 2020
Relative Pronouns on ACT English Tips and Practice
Relative Pronouns on ACT English Tips and Practice SAT / ACT Prep Online Guides and Tips Relative pronouns tend to inspire a lot of confusion. Is it the boywhocried wolf or the boywhomcried wolf? All's wellthat ends well or all's well which ends well? As much as we may think we need the fancier pronouns, like whom and which, more often than not, the ones we're more familiar with are just fine. In both of those cases, the first version of the saying is the correct one. In general, this principle holdstrue on the ACT, but we'll cover all the rule you'll need to know, as well as the special cases that may trip you up! Agreement for Relative Pronouns Using Relative Pronouns to Correctly Connect Clauses Tricky Cases: Who and Whom, Which and That, Where and In Which Strategy Round Up
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