mikemcgarry wrote:
No . As with many grammar rules, it comes from the inherent logic of grammar, which the GMAT inerrantly follows.
The word"which " is a pronoun. The word"that " hasmany uses , but one of them is as a pronoun. A pronoun has one and only one legitimate grammatical use, and that is to represent an individual noun that appears elsewhere in the sentence. A pronoun can't represent anything other than a noun. This is fundamental to what a pronoun is. Like SVA, this is purely
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