English Language & Usage Asked by Abhishek Dey on September 19, 2020
In this two sentences which one is better?
Also, tight has to be at the end of the sentence because it is part of a poem.
I don't think that "in which" is idiomatic in this semantic context; an ngram shows that it is never found (ngram) for the basic form, whereas "with which" is. It is safer to use this latter.
Answered by LPH on September 19, 2020
They're both grammatical.
I would use in which, because
the thread with which I used to tie her hair tight,
sounds too much like
the thread which I used to tied her hair tight,
which means that people could get confused as to the meaning. (In fact, if you look at the comments, people are getting confused by this.)
Answered by Peter Shor on September 19, 2020
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