Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel to see how this is important.
Oh, and to the pps, you're also wrong. It should be "Do you think a high school student should know FOR WHOM his or her school is named?" or the alternative, "Do you think high school students should know FOR WHOM their school is named?"
Never end a sentence with a preposition. And the word "after" is both an idiom and a preposition in this context.
You "feel" to see how this is important? Talk about spelling!
Anonymous wrote:I feel to see how this is important.
Oh, and to the pps, you're also wrong. It should be "Do you think a high school student should know FOR WHOM his or her school is named?" or the alternative, "Do you think high school students should know FOR WHOM their school is named?"
Never end a sentence with a preposition. And the word "after" is both an idiom and a preposition in this context.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe, but then again I think a high school teacher should know proper English grammar.
It should be "Do you think a high school student should know who his (or her) school is named after?" Alternatively, "Do you think high school students should know who THEIR school is named after."
+1
Anonymous wrote:If the namesake was a national or international (Churchill) "celebrity," then yes. If the school was named after a county commissioner from the 40's, well, then, not really.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe, but then again I think a high school teacher should know proper English grammar.
It should be "Do you think a high school student should know who his (or her) school is named after?" Alternatively, "Do you think high school students should know who THEIR school is named after."
Anonymous wrote:Maybe, but then again I think a high school teacher should know proper English grammar.
It should be "Do you think a high school student should know who his (or her) school is named after?" Alternatively, "Do you think high school students should know who THEIR school is named after."