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Discover Ludwig"table whose" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a specific table that has a certain characteristic or trait. For example, "She moved over to the table whose top was made of marble."
Exact(47)
Transformed pieces of furniture include a circular table whose top has discrete cut-out areas by Jean Blackburn.
He imagined a kind of executive fairground ride: a long conference table whose chairs moved around it.
They see a world full of discrete objects, like balls on a billiard table, whose properties are best analyzed individually.
He showed me a photograph of a man on the operating table, whose left leg was charred mush and mostly missing below the knee.
At one point during the evening, a wobbly guest backed into a table whose top consisted of a 19th-century Chinese porcelain platter.
But insist, as did a diner at a nearby table, whose shouting (a last resort) finally moved the kitchen to send out a few slices of plain bread.
Similar(13)
(Josef designed bedside tables whose drawer and knobs face sideways, toward the bed's inhabitant).
Mr. Buchanan coveted a pair of Egyptian-style tables whose lapis lazuli tops were too fragile to travel.
In the dining car, people were sitting at the tables, whose white cloths had all been removed, drinking the free coffee.
Large groups and families fill most of the tables, whose cushions remind me of those tied to mismatched chairs in a rural farmhouse.
As the dancers race to the rear of the stage, pulling five rows of tables whose legs scrape and bounce on a flat surface, the program ends with a high-decibel screech.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com