Clare, who I work with, is organising the London marathon this year





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I have read a rule of relative clause reductions, and it states,



2. We can use participles when reducing the sentence.



a) Present Participle "V-ing" (simultaneous)




1) We stood on the bridge which connects the two halves of the city.




//the relative clause is a defining clause.




a) We stood on the bridge connecting the two halves of the city.




//omitting by replacing them with present participle







Since the example has stated only about a sentence that contains a defining clause, that makes me curious whether we can also omit the pronouns with or without the to be verb in the non-defining relative clauses of the sentences below,




2) Clare, who works with me, is organising the London marathon this year.



3) Clare, who is working with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




into this sentence:




b) Clare, working with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




If so, why?










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  • 3




    It changes the meaning -- think again.
    – Kris
    Nov 15 at 9:38










  • Congratulations on your doing the London marathon.
    – TimLymington
    Nov 15 at 9:39






  • 1




    I'm not a native speaker @Kris. Could you tell me what the meaning of "Clare, working with me, is organising the London marathon this year." is please?
    – hbtpoprock
    Nov 15 at 9:46






  • 1




    Also, the answer from Chasly should be of help to you. Good Luck.
    – Kris
    Nov 15 at 9:53






  • 4




    Could it be as simple as "Clare, with whom I work, is organizing the London marathon this year"? To my eyes that completely removes any ambiguity and reads better too.
    – Spratty
    Nov 15 at 15:49

















up vote
5
down vote

favorite
1












I have read a rule of relative clause reductions, and it states,



2. We can use participles when reducing the sentence.



a) Present Participle "V-ing" (simultaneous)




1) We stood on the bridge which connects the two halves of the city.




//the relative clause is a defining clause.




a) We stood on the bridge connecting the two halves of the city.




//omitting by replacing them with present participle







Since the example has stated only about a sentence that contains a defining clause, that makes me curious whether we can also omit the pronouns with or without the to be verb in the non-defining relative clauses of the sentences below,




2) Clare, who works with me, is organising the London marathon this year.



3) Clare, who is working with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




into this sentence:




b) Clare, working with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




If so, why?










share|improve this question









New contributor




hbtpoprock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 3




    It changes the meaning -- think again.
    – Kris
    Nov 15 at 9:38










  • Congratulations on your doing the London marathon.
    – TimLymington
    Nov 15 at 9:39






  • 1




    I'm not a native speaker @Kris. Could you tell me what the meaning of "Clare, working with me, is organising the London marathon this year." is please?
    – hbtpoprock
    Nov 15 at 9:46






  • 1




    Also, the answer from Chasly should be of help to you. Good Luck.
    – Kris
    Nov 15 at 9:53






  • 4




    Could it be as simple as "Clare, with whom I work, is organizing the London marathon this year"? To my eyes that completely removes any ambiguity and reads better too.
    – Spratty
    Nov 15 at 15:49













up vote
5
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
5
down vote

favorite
1






1





I have read a rule of relative clause reductions, and it states,



2. We can use participles when reducing the sentence.



a) Present Participle "V-ing" (simultaneous)




1) We stood on the bridge which connects the two halves of the city.




//the relative clause is a defining clause.




a) We stood on the bridge connecting the two halves of the city.




//omitting by replacing them with present participle







Since the example has stated only about a sentence that contains a defining clause, that makes me curious whether we can also omit the pronouns with or without the to be verb in the non-defining relative clauses of the sentences below,




2) Clare, who works with me, is organising the London marathon this year.



3) Clare, who is working with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




into this sentence:




b) Clare, working with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




If so, why?










share|improve this question









New contributor




hbtpoprock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











I have read a rule of relative clause reductions, and it states,



2. We can use participles when reducing the sentence.



a) Present Participle "V-ing" (simultaneous)




1) We stood on the bridge which connects the two halves of the city.




//the relative clause is a defining clause.




a) We stood on the bridge connecting the two halves of the city.




//omitting by replacing them with present participle







Since the example has stated only about a sentence that contains a defining clause, that makes me curious whether we can also omit the pronouns with or without the to be verb in the non-defining relative clauses of the sentences below,




2) Clare, who works with me, is organising the London marathon this year.



3) Clare, who is working with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




into this sentence:




b) Clare, working with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




If so, why?







ielts






share|improve this question









New contributor




hbtpoprock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




hbtpoprock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 16 at 7:48





















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asked Nov 15 at 9:31









hbtpoprock

1




1




New contributor




hbtpoprock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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New contributor





hbtpoprock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






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Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 3




    It changes the meaning -- think again.
    – Kris
    Nov 15 at 9:38










  • Congratulations on your doing the London marathon.
    – TimLymington
    Nov 15 at 9:39






  • 1




    I'm not a native speaker @Kris. Could you tell me what the meaning of "Clare, working with me, is organising the London marathon this year." is please?
    – hbtpoprock
    Nov 15 at 9:46






  • 1




    Also, the answer from Chasly should be of help to you. Good Luck.
    – Kris
    Nov 15 at 9:53






  • 4




    Could it be as simple as "Clare, with whom I work, is organizing the London marathon this year"? To my eyes that completely removes any ambiguity and reads better too.
    – Spratty
    Nov 15 at 15:49














  • 3




    It changes the meaning -- think again.
    – Kris
    Nov 15 at 9:38










  • Congratulations on your doing the London marathon.
    – TimLymington
    Nov 15 at 9:39






  • 1




    I'm not a native speaker @Kris. Could you tell me what the meaning of "Clare, working with me, is organising the London marathon this year." is please?
    – hbtpoprock
    Nov 15 at 9:46






  • 1




    Also, the answer from Chasly should be of help to you. Good Luck.
    – Kris
    Nov 15 at 9:53






  • 4




    Could it be as simple as "Clare, with whom I work, is organizing the London marathon this year"? To my eyes that completely removes any ambiguity and reads better too.
    – Spratty
    Nov 15 at 15:49








3




3




It changes the meaning -- think again.
– Kris
Nov 15 at 9:38




It changes the meaning -- think again.
– Kris
Nov 15 at 9:38












Congratulations on your doing the London marathon.
– TimLymington
Nov 15 at 9:39




Congratulations on your doing the London marathon.
– TimLymington
Nov 15 at 9:39




1




1




I'm not a native speaker @Kris. Could you tell me what the meaning of "Clare, working with me, is organising the London marathon this year." is please?
– hbtpoprock
Nov 15 at 9:46




I'm not a native speaker @Kris. Could you tell me what the meaning of "Clare, working with me, is organising the London marathon this year." is please?
– hbtpoprock
Nov 15 at 9:46




1




1




Also, the answer from Chasly should be of help to you. Good Luck.
– Kris
Nov 15 at 9:53




Also, the answer from Chasly should be of help to you. Good Luck.
– Kris
Nov 15 at 9:53




4




4




Could it be as simple as "Clare, with whom I work, is organizing the London marathon this year"? To my eyes that completely removes any ambiguity and reads better too.
– Spratty
Nov 15 at 15:49




Could it be as simple as "Clare, with whom I work, is organizing the London marathon this year"? To my eyes that completely removes any ambiguity and reads better too.
– Spratty
Nov 15 at 15:49










1 Answer
1






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up vote
13
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As Kris points out in a comment, this doesn't work.




Clare, who works with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




Clare is organising. I don't necessarily have any connection with the event. It happens that Clare works with me.




Clare, who is working with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




This sentence is slightly ambiguous but, as a native speaker, I would interpret it to mean, "Clare, who currently is working with me, is organising the London marathon this year."
Again I may not have any involvement with the marathon.




Clare, working with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




This indicates unambiguously that Clare and I are working together on the organisation of the marathon.



Explanation



In the first two, "who is working with me"is adjectival and describes something about Clare.



In the last sentence, "working with me" is adverbial to the verb 'organising'.






share|improve this answer

















  • 3




    I think there would be even more ambiguity if we said: Clare, who I am working with, is organising the London marathon this year. In that case, it's even a little harder to tell if the “work“ refers to the marathon, or some other employment.
    – J.R.
    Nov 15 at 10:46






  • 1




    @J.R. That’s funny – I perceive almost no ambiguity in that version. I really have to stretch my understanding to turn it into a case of ‘I’ organising the marathon together with Clare.
    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    Nov 15 at 11:56






  • 1




    The last one sounds really strange to me. (And totally ambiguous.)
    – Fattie
    Nov 15 at 14:03






  • 1




    @JanusBahsJacquet It could be the case that the organizing the marathon is part of a larger body of work. For example if the speaker was the lead manager of the construction of a building and said "Claire, who I am working with, is overseeing the elevator installation".
    – JimmyJames
    Nov 15 at 16:09











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up vote
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down vote













As Kris points out in a comment, this doesn't work.




Clare, who works with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




Clare is organising. I don't necessarily have any connection with the event. It happens that Clare works with me.




Clare, who is working with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




This sentence is slightly ambiguous but, as a native speaker, I would interpret it to mean, "Clare, who currently is working with me, is organising the London marathon this year."
Again I may not have any involvement with the marathon.




Clare, working with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




This indicates unambiguously that Clare and I are working together on the organisation of the marathon.



Explanation



In the first two, "who is working with me"is adjectival and describes something about Clare.



In the last sentence, "working with me" is adverbial to the verb 'organising'.






share|improve this answer

















  • 3




    I think there would be even more ambiguity if we said: Clare, who I am working with, is organising the London marathon this year. In that case, it's even a little harder to tell if the “work“ refers to the marathon, or some other employment.
    – J.R.
    Nov 15 at 10:46






  • 1




    @J.R. That’s funny – I perceive almost no ambiguity in that version. I really have to stretch my understanding to turn it into a case of ‘I’ organising the marathon together with Clare.
    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    Nov 15 at 11:56






  • 1




    The last one sounds really strange to me. (And totally ambiguous.)
    – Fattie
    Nov 15 at 14:03






  • 1




    @JanusBahsJacquet It could be the case that the organizing the marathon is part of a larger body of work. For example if the speaker was the lead manager of the construction of a building and said "Claire, who I am working with, is overseeing the elevator installation".
    – JimmyJames
    Nov 15 at 16:09















up vote
13
down vote













As Kris points out in a comment, this doesn't work.




Clare, who works with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




Clare is organising. I don't necessarily have any connection with the event. It happens that Clare works with me.




Clare, who is working with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




This sentence is slightly ambiguous but, as a native speaker, I would interpret it to mean, "Clare, who currently is working with me, is organising the London marathon this year."
Again I may not have any involvement with the marathon.




Clare, working with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




This indicates unambiguously that Clare and I are working together on the organisation of the marathon.



Explanation



In the first two, "who is working with me"is adjectival and describes something about Clare.



In the last sentence, "working with me" is adverbial to the verb 'organising'.






share|improve this answer

















  • 3




    I think there would be even more ambiguity if we said: Clare, who I am working with, is organising the London marathon this year. In that case, it's even a little harder to tell if the “work“ refers to the marathon, or some other employment.
    – J.R.
    Nov 15 at 10:46






  • 1




    @J.R. That’s funny – I perceive almost no ambiguity in that version. I really have to stretch my understanding to turn it into a case of ‘I’ organising the marathon together with Clare.
    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    Nov 15 at 11:56






  • 1




    The last one sounds really strange to me. (And totally ambiguous.)
    – Fattie
    Nov 15 at 14:03






  • 1




    @JanusBahsJacquet It could be the case that the organizing the marathon is part of a larger body of work. For example if the speaker was the lead manager of the construction of a building and said "Claire, who I am working with, is overseeing the elevator installation".
    – JimmyJames
    Nov 15 at 16:09













up vote
13
down vote










up vote
13
down vote









As Kris points out in a comment, this doesn't work.




Clare, who works with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




Clare is organising. I don't necessarily have any connection with the event. It happens that Clare works with me.




Clare, who is working with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




This sentence is slightly ambiguous but, as a native speaker, I would interpret it to mean, "Clare, who currently is working with me, is organising the London marathon this year."
Again I may not have any involvement with the marathon.




Clare, working with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




This indicates unambiguously that Clare and I are working together on the organisation of the marathon.



Explanation



In the first two, "who is working with me"is adjectival and describes something about Clare.



In the last sentence, "working with me" is adverbial to the verb 'organising'.






share|improve this answer












As Kris points out in a comment, this doesn't work.




Clare, who works with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




Clare is organising. I don't necessarily have any connection with the event. It happens that Clare works with me.




Clare, who is working with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




This sentence is slightly ambiguous but, as a native speaker, I would interpret it to mean, "Clare, who currently is working with me, is organising the London marathon this year."
Again I may not have any involvement with the marathon.




Clare, working with me, is organising the London marathon this year.




This indicates unambiguously that Clare and I are working together on the organisation of the marathon.



Explanation



In the first two, "who is working with me"is adjectival and describes something about Clare.



In the last sentence, "working with me" is adverbial to the verb 'organising'.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 15 at 9:52









chasly from UK

22.4k13067




22.4k13067








  • 3




    I think there would be even more ambiguity if we said: Clare, who I am working with, is organising the London marathon this year. In that case, it's even a little harder to tell if the “work“ refers to the marathon, or some other employment.
    – J.R.
    Nov 15 at 10:46






  • 1




    @J.R. That’s funny – I perceive almost no ambiguity in that version. I really have to stretch my understanding to turn it into a case of ‘I’ organising the marathon together with Clare.
    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    Nov 15 at 11:56






  • 1




    The last one sounds really strange to me. (And totally ambiguous.)
    – Fattie
    Nov 15 at 14:03






  • 1




    @JanusBahsJacquet It could be the case that the organizing the marathon is part of a larger body of work. For example if the speaker was the lead manager of the construction of a building and said "Claire, who I am working with, is overseeing the elevator installation".
    – JimmyJames
    Nov 15 at 16:09














  • 3




    I think there would be even more ambiguity if we said: Clare, who I am working with, is organising the London marathon this year. In that case, it's even a little harder to tell if the “work“ refers to the marathon, or some other employment.
    – J.R.
    Nov 15 at 10:46






  • 1




    @J.R. That’s funny – I perceive almost no ambiguity in that version. I really have to stretch my understanding to turn it into a case of ‘I’ organising the marathon together with Clare.
    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    Nov 15 at 11:56






  • 1




    The last one sounds really strange to me. (And totally ambiguous.)
    – Fattie
    Nov 15 at 14:03






  • 1




    @JanusBahsJacquet It could be the case that the organizing the marathon is part of a larger body of work. For example if the speaker was the lead manager of the construction of a building and said "Claire, who I am working with, is overseeing the elevator installation".
    – JimmyJames
    Nov 15 at 16:09








3




3




I think there would be even more ambiguity if we said: Clare, who I am working with, is organising the London marathon this year. In that case, it's even a little harder to tell if the “work“ refers to the marathon, or some other employment.
– J.R.
Nov 15 at 10:46




I think there would be even more ambiguity if we said: Clare, who I am working with, is organising the London marathon this year. In that case, it's even a little harder to tell if the “work“ refers to the marathon, or some other employment.
– J.R.
Nov 15 at 10:46




1




1




@J.R. That’s funny – I perceive almost no ambiguity in that version. I really have to stretch my understanding to turn it into a case of ‘I’ organising the marathon together with Clare.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
Nov 15 at 11:56




@J.R. That’s funny – I perceive almost no ambiguity in that version. I really have to stretch my understanding to turn it into a case of ‘I’ organising the marathon together with Clare.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
Nov 15 at 11:56




1




1




The last one sounds really strange to me. (And totally ambiguous.)
– Fattie
Nov 15 at 14:03




The last one sounds really strange to me. (And totally ambiguous.)
– Fattie
Nov 15 at 14:03




1




1




@JanusBahsJacquet It could be the case that the organizing the marathon is part of a larger body of work. For example if the speaker was the lead manager of the construction of a building and said "Claire, who I am working with, is overseeing the elevator installation".
– JimmyJames
Nov 15 at 16:09




@JanusBahsJacquet It could be the case that the organizing the marathon is part of a larger body of work. For example if the speaker was the lead manager of the construction of a building and said "Claire, who I am working with, is overseeing the elevator installation".
– JimmyJames
Nov 15 at 16:09










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