Asked by Ivegot-U
Which sentence uses the word relevant correctly?
Responses
The chowder was hot and relevant.
The chowder was hot and relevant.
It doesn't matter how relevant your garden is if you don't water it.
It doesn't matter how relevant your garden is if you don't water it.
Any relevant information can be phoned in to the police department.
Any relevant information can be phoned in to the police department.
The butterflies' wings were so relevant that they seemed painted.
Responses
The chowder was hot and relevant.
The chowder was hot and relevant.
It doesn't matter how relevant your garden is if you don't water it.
It doesn't matter how relevant your garden is if you don't water it.
Any relevant information can be phoned in to the police department.
Any relevant information can be phoned in to the police department.
The butterflies' wings were so relevant that they seemed painted.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The correct use of the word "relevant" is in the following sentences:
1. It doesn't matter how relevant your garden is if you don't water it.
2. Any relevant information can be phoned in to the police department.
Both sentences use "relevant" appropriately to convey that something is pertinent or important in a given context.
1. It doesn't matter how relevant your garden is if you don't water it.
2. Any relevant information can be phoned in to the police department.
Both sentences use "relevant" appropriately to convey that something is pertinent or important in a given context.
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