grammaticality - What is wrong with "Where should this car be parked?"?


Why does Microsoft Word 2010 show an error for the following sentence?



1. Where should this car be parked?



Word 2010 also suggests changing the sentence to



2. Where this car should be parked?



Is the sentence (1) wrong? If yes, why? What about sentence (2)?



Answer



When used as a stand-alone sentence, you're right:



1) Where should this car be parked? <-- correct


2) Where this car should be parked?



Now... if it's part of a larger sentence it's different:



1) Do you know where should this car be parked?


2) Do you know where this car should be parked? <-- correct



I would speculate that either there was some other typo that made MS Word think you were in the second scenario, or it was just a flat-out bug in the grammar checker.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

commas - Does this sentence have too many subjunctives?

verbs - "Baby is creeping" vs. "baby is crawling" in AmE

time - English notation for hour, minutes and seconds

etymology - Origin of "s--t eating grin"

grammatical number - Use of lone apostrophe for plural?

etymology - Where does the phrase "doctored" originate?

single word requests - What do you call hypothetical inhabitants living on the Moon?