A man is a prisoner of hatred . A man takes away another man's freedom. 'combine the following sentences using ' 'who'
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Answer:
A man is a prisoner of hatred who takes away another man's freedom
Explanation:
It is because the man in both the sentence is the same and we have taken 'a man' in the second
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A man who is a prisoner of hatred takes away another man's freedom.
- The given sentences are independent clauses that can be combined using the relative pronoun 'who'.
- The word 'who' is used to join two sentences that have a common subject. In this case, the common subject is 'man'.
- To combine the sentences, we can use 'who' after the first sentence's subject, followed by the second sentence without its subject.
- The combined sentence becomes: A man who is a prisoner of hatred takes away another man's freedom.
- In this sentence, 'who' acts as a relative pronoun that refers to the subject of the first sentence, i.e., 'man'.
- The combined sentence conveys the idea that a man who is consumed by hatred is capable of taking away another man's freedom.
- The sentence is grammatically correct and uses proper syntax to convey the meaning effectively.
- The relative pronoun 'who' is a powerful tool to join sentences and add variety to sentence structures.
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