Crosswords1 min ago
does this make sense?
19 Answers
"She has passed on a wealth of knowledge to Thomas, who shares her enthusiasm for caring about others and the world around him."
or should the final word be 'her' or 'them'?
or should the final word be 'her' or 'them'?
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The natural assumption here is that the 'she' is Thomas's mother or some other loving female relative and that he is a child. However, they could equally both be adults, say professor and student.
If he is a child, she might actually be a nanny or tutoress who can't stand the little blighter...that is, she may not care a good goldarn for the world about HIM but does for the world about HER. Nevertheless, as a dutiful employee, she has taught him many things and - as a result - he has acquired many of her views, albeit he is applying them in a different way.
If you use 'them', as I suggested earlier, you cover both possibilities; namely, that these two people may occupy what amounts to separate worlds or the same world. (Yes, I know there is only one actual world in a physical sense but, in another way, we each occupy our very own world.)
Stick with 'them'.
If he is a child, she might actually be a nanny or tutoress who can't stand the little blighter...that is, she may not care a good goldarn for the world about HIM but does for the world about HER. Nevertheless, as a dutiful employee, she has taught him many things and - as a result - he has acquired many of her views, albeit he is applying them in a different way.
If you use 'them', as I suggested earlier, you cover both possibilities; namely, that these two people may occupy what amounts to separate worlds or the same world. (Yes, I know there is only one actual world in a physical sense but, in another way, we each occupy our very own world.)
Stick with 'them'.
I don't agree with "merely" safer. The plain fact is that there are two potential ambiguities in the original sentence...
a) her enthusiasm/his enthusiasm
b) her world/his world.
We know for sure that the enthusiasm is shared, so they/them is clearly OK, but we are unsure whether their 'worlds' are identical. Accordingly, maybe the best solution would be a complete rewrite, but if - as I imagine Crisgal wanted - we are looking for a minimal alteration, then 'them' is simply the best (at the risk of sounding like Diana Ross or whoever!)
A possible alternative...
She has passed on a wealth of knowledge to Thomas. As a result, he cares as much about others as she does and has the same enthusiasm for his world as she has for hers.
Clumsy, obviously, so that's why I still believe 'them' is the neatest solution.
a) her enthusiasm/his enthusiasm
b) her world/his world.
We know for sure that the enthusiasm is shared, so they/them is clearly OK, but we are unsure whether their 'worlds' are identical. Accordingly, maybe the best solution would be a complete rewrite, but if - as I imagine Crisgal wanted - we are looking for a minimal alteration, then 'them' is simply the best (at the risk of sounding like Diana Ross or whoever!)
A possible alternative...
She has passed on a wealth of knowledge to Thomas. As a result, he cares as much about others as she does and has the same enthusiasm for his world as she has for hers.
Clumsy, obviously, so that's why I still believe 'them' is the neatest solution.