What are the exact words: Where or “Which”?
What is the least gravitational force on earth?
How
can I determine which side of Earth has the lowest gravity?
Why “which” is preferable to “where” (where)?
The intent of the original sentence was to express “At which location at or near the surface of the planet Earth will an arbitrary mass experience the least acceleration roughly in the direction of the planet’s center of mass, assuming that no external forces are bearing on the mass. “What
are the best songs of all time?”
‘Correcting’ is the easiest sentence to put together.
The issue with my sentence is that there is no subject for the verb ‘has’ (from the verb ‘to have’).
Where has it gone?’ uses “where” and “has”, but it also contains the pronoun “it”, which represents the subject of the verb “to have”.
I think that the person who corrected your sentenced tried to use ‘which’ because ‘which’ is a pronoun that might be used to give the verb ‘to have’ a subject (in your sentence). I am trying to determine where is the lowest gravity on Earth. The same will happen to the
preceding reply. I will just remove (you get the benefit of the word) because I have used
‘is’ instead of “has” I would guess that a construction like this is preferable to both the original and corrected sentences. If you wanted to use the verb ‘to
have’ for your example, you would need to say things like, ‘I am trying to determine which part of the Earth has the lowest gravity’. What part of the earth is the subject of
“has”?
What is the world’s lowest gravity? I’m less techno but makes the sound
better.
‘Correcting’ is the easiest sentence to put together.
The issue with my sentence is that there is no subject for the verb ‘has’ (from the verb ‘to have’).
Where has it gone?’ uses “where” and “has”, but it also contains the pronoun “it”, which represents the subject of the verb “to have”.
I think that the person who corrected your sentenced tried to use ‘which’ because ‘which’ is a pronoun that might be used to give the verb ‘to have’ a subject (in your sentence). I am trying to determine where is the lowest gravity on Earth. The same will happen to the
preceding reply. I will just remove (you get the benefit of the word) because I have used
‘is’ instead of “has” I would guess that a construction like this is preferable to both the original and corrected sentences. If you wanted to use the verb ‘to
have’ for your example, you would need to say things like, ‘I am trying to determine which part of the Earth has the lowest gravity’. What part of the earth is the subject of
“has”?
‘Correcting’ is the easiest sentence to put together.
The issue with my sentence is that there is no subject for the verb ‘has’ (from the verb ‘to have’).
Where has it gone?’ uses “where” and “has”, but it also contains the pronoun “it”, which represents the subject of the verb “to have”.
I think that the person who corrected your sentenced tried to use ‘which’ because ‘which’ is a pronoun that might be used to give the verb ‘to have’ a subject (in your sentence). I am trying to determine where is the lowest gravity on Earth. The same will happen to the
preceding reply. I will just remove (you get the benefit of the word) because I have used
‘is’ instead of “has” I would guess that a construction like this is preferable to both the original and corrected sentences. If you wanted to use the verb ‘to
have’ for your example, you would need to say things like, ‘I am trying to determine which part of the Earth has the lowest gravity’. What part of the earth is the subject of
“has”?
What is the world’s lowest gravity? I’m less techno but makes the sound
better.
‘Correcting’ is the easiest sentence to put together.
The issue with my sentence is that there is no subject for the verb ‘has’ (from the verb ‘to have’).
Where has it gone?’ uses “where” and “has”, but it also contains the pronoun “it”, which represents the subject of the verb “to have”.
I think that the person who corrected your sentenced tried to use ‘which’ because ‘which’ is a pronoun that might be used to give the verb ‘to have’ a subject (in your sentence). I am trying to determine where is the lowest gravity on Earth. The same will happen to the
preceding reply. I will just remove (you get the benefit of the word) because I have used
‘is’ instead of “has” I would guess that a construction like this is preferable to both the original and corrected sentences. If you wanted to use the verb ‘to
have’ for your example, you would need to say things like, ‘I am trying to determine which part of the Earth has the lowest gravity’. What part of the earth is the subject of
“has”?
‘Correcting’ is the easiest sentence to put together.
The issue with my sentence is that there is no subject for the verb ‘has’ (from the verb ‘to have’).
Where has it gone?’ uses “where” and “has”, but it also contains the pronoun “it”, which represents the subject of the verb “to have”.
I think that the person who corrected your sentenced tried to use ‘which’ because ‘which’ is a pronoun that might be used to give the verb ‘to have’ a subject (in your sentence). I am trying to determine where is the lowest gravity on Earth. The same will happen to the
preceding reply. I will just remove (you get the benefit of the word) because I have used
‘is’ instead of “has” I would guess that a construction like this is preferable to both the original and corrected sentences. If you wanted to use the verb ‘to
have’ for your example, you would need to say things like, ‘I am trying to determine which part of the Earth has the lowest gravity’. What part of the earth is the subject of
“has”?
‘Correcting’ is the easiest sentence to put together.
The issue with my sentence is that there is no subject for the verb ‘has’ (from the verb ‘to have’).
Where has it gone?’ uses “where” and “has”, but it also contains the pronoun “it”, which represents the subject of the verb “to have”.
I think that the person who corrected your sentenced tried to use ‘which’ because ‘which’ is a pronoun that might be used to give the verb ‘to have’ a subject (in your sentence). I am trying to determine where is the lowest gravity on Earth. The same will happen to the
preceding reply. I will just remove (you get the benefit of the word) because I have used
‘is’ instead of “has” I would guess that a construction like this is preferable to both the original and corrected sentences. If you wanted to use the verb ‘to
have’ for your example, you would need to say things like, ‘I am trying to determine which part of the Earth has the lowest gravity’. What part of the earth is the subject of
“has”?
What is the world’s lowest gravity? I’m less techno but makes the sound
better.
‘Correcting’ is the easiest sentence to put together.
The issue with my sentence is that there is no subject for the verb ‘has’ (from the verb ‘to have’).
Where has it gone?’ uses “where” and “has”, but it also contains the pronoun “it”, which represents the subject of the verb “to have”.
I think that the person who corrected your sentenced tried to use ‘which’ because ‘which’ is a pronoun that might be used to give the verb ‘to have’ a subject (in your sentence). I am trying to determine where is the lowest gravity on Earth. The same will happen to the
preceding reply. I will just remove (you get the benefit of the word) because I have used
‘is’ instead of “has” I would guess that a construction like this is preferable to both the original and corrected sentences. If you wanted to use the verb ‘to
have’ for your example, you would need to say things like, ‘I am trying to determine which part of the Earth has the lowest gravity’. What part of the earth is the subject of
“has”?