Re: guidelines, requiring
Quote:
Originally Posted by
keannu
I posted a similar question before. If there's a comma between a word and a present parcitiple, is "which is" omitted after the comma? So is the original sentence "...guidelines, which is requiring ..."?
Without a comma, it should be a descriptive usage, right?
"...guidelines requiring " = "guidelines which is requiring"
ex)People living in poor areas of the world often face difficulties when trying to gain a higher education. The University of the People was founded by the United Nations to address this problem. It's an online university available to people anywhere in the world......There is also the problem of its admission guidelines, requiring potential students to have a high school diploma or the equivalent.....
If you wanted to use "which" in your example, it would have to be "...guidelines which require...",. "guidelines which is requiring" is completely wrong.
Re: guidelines, requiring
Quote:
Originally Posted by
bhaisahab
If you wanted to use "which" in your example, it would have to be "...guidelines which require...",. "guidelines which is requiring" is completely wrong.
Then what's the difference with and without a comma?
Re: guidelines, requiring
Quote:
Originally Posted by
keannu
Then what's the difference with and without a comma?
The comma is unnecessary IMO.