Asked by rfvv
1. She found her photo with a lot of comments, making fun of her pose.
2. She found her photo with a lot of comments, which were making fun of her pose.
3. She found her photo with a lot of comments, which made fun of her pose.
4. She found her photo with a lot of comments, and it were making fun of her pose.
5. She found her photo with a lot of comments, and it made fun of her pose.
-------------------------
#1 is the original sentence. What about the others? Are the others the same in meaning? Would you check them, please? Does 'it' refer to 'her photo with a lot of comments'?
2. She found her photo with a lot of comments, which were making fun of her pose.
3. She found her photo with a lot of comments, which made fun of her pose.
4. She found her photo with a lot of comments, and it were making fun of her pose.
5. She found her photo with a lot of comments, and it made fun of her pose.
-------------------------
#1 is the original sentence. What about the others? Are the others the same in meaning? Would you check them, please? Does 'it' refer to 'her photo with a lot of comments'?
Answers
Answered by
Writeacher
1 and 3 are best. All the rest are wordy or incorrect.
In 4 and 5, the pronoun "it" seems to be referring to the photo (singular), not the the comments (plural).
In 4 and 5, the pronoun "it" seems to be referring to the photo (singular), not the the comments (plural).
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.