You need 'who' instead of 'that' whichever one you choose.
How about 'To. . . who inspire me every single day'.
Rover
Hi,
I'm almost finished with writing a book, and I would like to add a dedication to my family.
Can you correct the followin sentence, please?
Which one is the best expression?
1)To Daniela, Loretta and Maurizio: the ones that motivate my life (THE ONES is correct?)
2)To Daniela, Loretta and Maurizio: the persons that motivate me
3)To Daniela, Loretta and Maurizio: the people that motivate me
4)To Daniela, Loretta and Maurizio: the persons that make my world go round
5) To Daniela, Loretta and Maurizio: the persons that inspire my every single day
any other correction will be appreciated!
Thanks!!!
Vito
You need 'who' instead of 'that' whichever one you choose.
How about 'To. . . who inspire me every single day'.
Rover
Thank you for the suggestion and for the correction. Any other suggestion on how to make the sentence a little more effective, yet personal?
I quite like Rover's suggestion. Doesn't that accomplish your goal?
I'm not a teacher, but I write for a living. Please don't ask me about 2nd conditionals, but I'm a safe bet for what reads well in (American) English.
Yes, totally.... !..just fishing for some other possibilities :)
"to..... : the ones who motivate my life and inspire me every day"
How does this sound?
:)
I don't think people motivate you life. They motivate YOU.
To ___, ___, and ____, who motivate and inspire me every single day.
I'm not a teacher, but I write for a living. Please don't ask me about 2nd conditionals, but I'm a safe bet for what reads well in (American) English.
Thanks again.... I think I'll stick with this latest sentence :)
Hi again,
I came up with another "more personal" sentence for the dedication, and I would like to know if it makes sense :)
"to X, Y, Z: the ones who give reasons to my life"...
sorry for the repeated question :)
That's worse than anything you've come up with so far.
Forget it.
Rover
You received good advice some time ago. If it ain't broke, don't fix it.
In other words, "If what you have does the job well, do not try to tinker with it".