Peter was afraid

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Bassim

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Would you please help me and correct the mistakes in my sentence? I am not sure if its phrasing and punctuation are correct.

Peter was afraid of losing his job because without it he would be nothing - a plain, small man who no woman would ever glance at in the street.
 

tedmc

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Peter was afraid of losing his job because, without it, he would be nothing but a plain, small man whom no woman would ever glance at in the street.
 

Bassim

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Thank you, tedmc,

You don't think that I could use a dash sign in my sentence (nothing - plain, small man)?
 

Matthew Wai

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... a plain, small man whom no woman would ever glance at in the street.
If I recall correctly, the teachers said that 'who' was more common than 'whom'.
 

Rover_KE

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If you did that you can't omit 'a' before 'plain'.
 

MikeNewYork

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Matthew, that is true, but "whom" is still correct.
 

TheParser

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***** NOT A TEACHER *****

Hello, Bassim:

May I just point out three unimportant points?

1. Some people would use two lines for a dash. (One line is a hyphen.) Thus: "We are alike -- on the inside." -- Mark Twain.

2. If you wish to avoid the who / whom controversy, use neither. A relative pronoun is not necessary in your sentence, especially in speech.

3. Some people might be more comfortable with "on the street."


Thus: "Peter was afraid of losing his job because, without it, he would be nothing -- a plain, small man no woman would ever even glance at on the street."
 

MikeNewYork

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There is already an "at" in that sentence. I think it is in the proper place.
 

MikeNewYork

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I don't agree that the ending preposition changes registers.
 

MikeNewYork

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I am a "whom" person because it is grammatical. I am not against ending a sentence with a preposition because that practice is also grammatical. Some "rules" come and then they go.
 

MikeNewYork

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And how do you determine register? Is that written down somewhere? We have our own preferences. Let's just leave it at that.
 

MikeNewYork

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Yes, Matthew. And I am certain that Piscean understood that.
 

Auldlangsyne

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(not a teacher)


To whom it may concern,

To produce an em dash, press and hold down the Alt key, and then choose from the numeric keyboard: 0151.

:-D
 
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