Question
Updated on
23 Apr 2021
- Korean
-
English (US)
-
Japanese
-
English (UK)
Question about English (US)
1. As a graduate who majored in English and an English teacher, I need to have expertise in English and am able to correct native English speakers' errors.
2. As a graduate who studied English and an English teacher, I must have sufficient expertise in English and the confidence to correct native English speakers' errors.
3. As a graduate in English and an English teacher, I’ll have to be fluent in English and be able to correct native speakers’ errors.
4. As an English major graduate and an English teacher, I'm supposed to have sufficient expertise in English and the ability to correct native English speakers' errors.
5. As an English teacher who majored in English, I'll need sufficient expertise in English to be able to correct native English speakers' errors.
→ All they grammatically correct and natural?
→ For no.1 and no.2, is it OK to omit "who"?
1. As a graduate who majored in English and an English teacher, I need to have expertise in English and am able to correct native English speakers' errors.
2. As a graduate who studied English and an English teacher, I must have sufficient expertise in English and the confidence to correct native English speakers' errors.
3. As a graduate in English and an English teacher, I’ll have to be fluent in English and be able to correct native speakers’ errors.
4. As an English major graduate and an English teacher, I'm supposed to have sufficient expertise in English and the ability to correct native English speakers' errors.
5. As an English teacher who majored in English, I'll need sufficient expertise in English to be able to correct native English speakers' errors.
→ All they grammatically correct and natural?
→ For no.1 and no.2, is it OK to omit "who"?
2. As a graduate who studied English and an English teacher, I must have sufficient expertise in English and the confidence to correct native English speakers' errors.
3. As a graduate in English and an English teacher, I’ll have to be fluent in English and be able to correct native speakers’ errors.
4. As an English major graduate and an English teacher, I'm supposed to have sufficient expertise in English and the ability to correct native English speakers' errors.
5. As an English teacher who majored in English, I'll need sufficient expertise in English to be able to correct native English speakers' errors.
→ All they grammatically correct and natural?
→ For no.1 and no.2, is it OK to omit "who"?
Answers
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- Arabic Near fluent
- Turkish Near fluent
- English (US)
3-4 are perfect gramatically and also natural! In 1 and 2, "who" can not be omitted because it is modifying the "a graduate" part of the sentence.
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- Korean
- English (US)
You're welcome and yes, it is unessecary
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- Korean
- English (US)
It is not incorrect, but it does make it wordy. Being a graduate implies that you majored in it. So it would be a cleaner sentence to omit the major, but it is not wrong to keep it either.
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- Korean
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