0
1
In te next sentence:
We use "this" only in the first question. The answer and the other questions use "it"
Is correct?
If the above is correct, then the following example:
- Is this a gull?
- no, it's not a gull
- what is it?
- it’s a duck
- what color is it
- it’s black and white
Without taking into account the above explained, the example would be the following:
- Is this a gull?
- no, this is not a gull
- what is this?
- this is a duck
- what color is this
- this is black and white
Which of the two examples is correct?
"It or this can only be present in a sentence, or they can be mixed together". How does it answer the OP's question about the correctness of the use of "it" and "this" in his sentences? – Victor B. – 2017-08-08T22:25:11.803
@Rompey My answer is a guideline. He stated that you can't use it in a beginning question and I showed that you could. If I state that it's correct/incorrect, that's useless without an explanation. – Kman3 – 2017-08-09T00:18:54.440
So, using this defines a particular object. Once it's been identified with the first this, use it to continue to refer to it. Re-using this implies that a new object is being identified. Is correct? – ymk369 – 2017-08-09T22:54:37.903
@ymk369 Close. This defines a particular object. Once's it's been identified with the first this, you can either respond with this, where the subject must be still the same, or it, which still references the same object. In most cases, it's personal preference. – Kman3 – 2017-08-10T00:36:08.783