• [email protected]
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    99 months ago

    Non native english speaker here, not trying to have an argument but to learn.
    Is it correct to use “whose” in this context?

    I kinda thought “whose” was meant to refer to a person and not an object, but really I don’t know.
    Though I’d use something like “of which” or whatever else instead.

    (Or just do what I do and rephrase it so you don’t need to bother with this syntax to begin with.)
    “What is a dish where each individual component you like, but when combined together become a dish you think is nasty?”

    • @[email protected]OP
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      69 months ago

      I’m not a native English speaker either but I’ve spoken English from a young age. “Whose” is used to denote belonging, not necessarily personhood, which can be confusing as “who” does denote personhood. There isn’t really a “whose” equivalent for objects so it’s used for any noun which another noun belongs to.

      • Jojo
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        29 months ago

        Yeah, you shouldn’t use who’s for objects, as in the one “who is” doing something; that should be “that’s” or "which is. But for possession like this case “that’s” doesn’t work at all. “Of which” or “for which” might work in this sentence, but I don’t think any native speaker would be confused by whose here

    • HatchetHaro
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      9 months ago

      In this context, “whose” works fine, on the basis that almost no other options work at all outside of completely rewriting the question.

      I personally would just switch it out for “with” instead; it does slightly reframe the phrase but doesn’t change the question itself.

      • @Dasus
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        29 months ago

        outside of completely rewriting the question.

        Doesn’t require much rewriting tbh

        “the component parts of which”

    • @Sarmyth
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      39 months ago

      “Whose” should probably be “thats”. But a native English speaker will occasionally personify things and so the meaning would be the same, but you are correct.

      • Bob
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        9 months ago

        “Thats” is dialectal.