Does anyone understand this? How?

Let’s say I have several water faucets in my house, but one one has low water pressure and I say: “I have a

water faucet and water is very weak. So some water’s weak (i.e. no taps) or they don’t. Anyway, I will get a water faucet that is too weak” would be a good plumbing faucet but others don’t. Would

you understand that I have more water faucets not only one? Is that sentence correct grammatically speaking? I know I have more choices to imply that such as; “I have a water faucet with low water pressure. I “have a water faucet whose water pressure is low.” and “I have a water faucet whose water pressure is low.” that’s what I sent a friend while they were in Hawaii and I texted them that because only that came to my mind when I was chatting with him I wonder if I sounded awkward or if it was ungrammatical. The other gentleman on the call said that my nephew has the same water pressure as me, but my phone is fine. What do you guys think about me in general?

Can you describe what it is like to be a geek?

Add Comment
1 Answer(s)

You specifically asked about your text, not about the various (better) options there are to make your point.

What do you think is the problem with the meaning of your text? Is there a way to make a sentence incorrect. What is an appropriate word for whose.

I only have a water faucet whose pressure is very weak. I’ve noticed the same leak.

Which is a relative pronoun, and whose is an possessive.

Why is the water faucet pressure very weak?

Answered on March 4, 2021.
Add Comment

Your Answer

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.