So, Grammarly is correcting me a lot on a phrase I tend to use, and I don’t entirely understand the difference.

On a sentence that expands upon a previous sentence in dialog, I tend to have a character say “Which means […]”

Grammarly wants to fix this to be “This means […]”

It’s become clear to me that I tend to use ‘which’ instead of ‘this’ when speaking, but I am not sure why one is preferred use over the other.

Can anyone offer me some insight? I already tried googling “which vs this”, but I got results for “which vs that” instead, which is an entirely different use case.

  • Mifuyne@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I remember reading somewhere that if the text is supposed to be conversational, then you can be way more lax with grammar rules. Most human don’t talk like they have a grammar-bot pressing a gun to their back 😝 So OP, you are definitely free to stick with “Which means.” Hell, if this is first person narration, then all the more reason to.

    Don’t let grammatical accuracy impose artificial limitation on your expression <3

    ^ This, 100%!