Rilwen
New member
- Joined
- Jan 25, 2011
- Member Type
- Other
- Native Language
- Polish
- Home Country
- Poland
- Current Location
- UK
In a formal document by some world-renowned institution I've found the following phrasing:
"The reports clarify that it exists a relationship between ..."
I would say "there exists" instead of "it exists". If the latter is correct, are there any differences/rules how to use it?
Again, many thanks for your help,
R.
"The reports clarify that it exists a relationship between ..."
I would say "there exists" instead of "it exists". If the latter is correct, are there any differences/rules how to use it?
Again, many thanks for your help,
R.