[Grammar] which is deleting

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kite

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Hi there all,

"A girl who is grown up in a rural society/environment and even if not much educated has a better understanding about the society than a girl who is grown up in an urban society/environment." Now I am going to rewrite this sentence deleting which is from the sentence to check if I can write it correctly.

"A girl grown up in a rural society and even if not much educated has a better understanding about the society than a girl grown up in an urban society."

Is my sentence correct?

Thanks.
 
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Neither one is at all natural.

A girl who has grown up in a rural society will have a better understanding of that society than a girl who has grown up in an urban environment.
 
Thanks. I wanted to try deleting the relative pronoun. In your sentence, can't "who has" be deleted to shorten the sentence?
"A girl grown up in a rural society will have a better understanding of that society than a girl who has grown up in an urban environment."
 
Not with the phrasal verb "grow up". But if you substitute "raised" it would work: a girl raised in a rural society...
 
Not with the phrasal verb "grow up". But if you substitute "raised" it would work: a girl raised in a rural society...
ou

Then you say that we can delete relative pronouns when it is with a single verb but not phrasal verb, don't you?
 
Then you say that we can delete relative pronouns when it is with a single verb but not phrasal verb, don't you?
No.

The point is that 'raised' is passive in meaning, as would be the acceptable 'brought up'.
 
English grammar seems to be very complicated.:-D

Thanks to both of you anyway.
 
The girl grew up / has grown up in the country.- No passive possible.

The girl's grandparents raised her / have raised her. - She was raised / has been raised by her grandparents.
The girl's grandparents brought her up / have brought her up.- She was brought up / has been brought up by her grandparents.

 
Wow! very clear 5jj. The case was with verbs. Some verbs cannot be made as passive, so the "grow up" is one of them. I knew it but I didn't know what those verbs are. Is there any way to find verbs if which verbs can be made as positive and which is cannot be? And I believe they have name. Can you please give me those name? I mean how those verbs(which have no passive form and which have) are called.
 
Intransitive verbs, verbs that do not take an object, have no passive form.
 
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