in which vs whose

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Tan Elaine

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Caribou are the only deer in which males and females both have antlers -- though only some females have them.

Is 'in which' correctly used? I would use 'whose' instead.

Thanks.
 

billmcd

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Caribou are the only deer in which males and females both have antlers -- though only some females have them.

Is 'in which' correctly used? I would use 'whose' instead.

Thanks.

I would prefer, "Caribou are the only species of deer of which both males and females have antlers, although only some females have that feature".
 

Raymott

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I'd also add "the only species", but I think this allows "in which".
ie. Caribou are the only species of deer in which males and females both have antlers."
Or you could write, "The only kind/type of deer"
"In this species/type/kind of deer both males a females have antlers" is better than "In these deer, both males and females have antlers".
 

Rover_KE

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I agree with Tan Elaine.

I see no reason to go out of your way to avoid whose.

Rover
 
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