
Student or Learner
Can "in which" or "where" be omitted in this structure?
gz52
ex)This is the city (in which) Obama was born.
=>This is the city Obama was born.
I'm not a teacher yet, but I am studying a Bachelor of Education with an English Literature major at Charles Sturt University, in NSW, Australia.
In that case, you're not omitting "in which". You're omitting "which" and moving "in" to the end.
It's certainly possible to change "That's the city which Obama was born in" to "That's the city Obama was born in." That's a rather common omission of the relative pronoun. You can't completely omit "in which". You also can't omit "where", because it means "in which".
I'm not a teacher yet, but I am studying a Bachelor of Education with an English Literature major at Charles Sturt University, in NSW, Australia.
What is this? My grammar books says if an antecedent is a general word such as "time" "place" "reason", relative adverbs can be omitted. Is this an exceptional case?
ex)This is the place a theater used to be.
Maybe only when you use "place", "where" can be omitted, right?