Are most of them due to/most of them to)?
India has lost over 2,000 soldiers in the last three decades, most of them to extreme and unpredictable weather events.
Large laundries face rapid changes most of them due to increasing utility cost.
What to use in sentence?
The test is whether or not the sentences is coherent when you eliminate terms most of them from the sentence. How was India affected after losing
-
more than 2,000 people in the past three decades due to ill-conceived and misused army tactics?
-
How many soldiers have India lost in recent years due to weather?
-
Large laundry facilities face rapid changes to rising utility costs.
-
Large laundries face rapid changes due to rising utility costs.
Sentence 1 says there were soldiers lost as a direct consequence of the weather events. If an advanced lightning strike killed a soldier for an enemy purpose, then the soldiers would qualify but not the ground army would be under fire anyway. In sentence 2, both are qualifies.
Sentence 3 says that for large laundries, rising utility costs are changing rapidly. Since change is constrained by rise (i.e. the rise of population), the rise of population is more constrained. Not drop ), this means that the costs are rising rapidly. This interpretation seems forced and is therefore unlikely to be the intent or purpose. Since power is rising, the sentence 4 can seem more natural to mean that rising utility costs have led to rapid changes in something else. If not, they may have had to supplement their profits by introducing vending machines in their shops.
What are
some of the most cited sentences, both due to and/or most of them to, so don’t you understand on how to use them? When
our child is not causing what when “X due to Y” is “X due to Y”? When Y causes X, what is the effect?
Between rising costs and rising costs, large laundries often have to face rapid changes. These are the most costly of all. This sentence have a smoother flow and avoids the clumsy ‘due-to’.
The test is whether or not the sentences is coherent when you eliminate terms most of them from the sentence. How was India affected after losing
-
more than 2,000 people in the past three decades due to ill-conceived and misused army tactics?
-
How many soldiers have India lost in recent years due to weather?
-
Large laundry facilities face rapid changes to rising utility costs.
-
Large laundries face rapid changes due to rising utility costs.
Sentence 1 says there were soldiers lost as a direct consequence of the weather events. If an advanced lightning strike killed a soldier for an enemy purpose, then the soldiers would qualify but not the ground army would be under fire anyway. In sentence 2, both are qualifies.
Sentence 3 says that for large laundries, rising utility costs are changing rapidly. Since change is constrained by rise (i.e. the rise of population), the rise of population is more constrained. Not drop ), this means that the costs are rising rapidly. This interpretation seems forced and is therefore unlikely to be the intent or purpose. Since power is rising, the sentence 4 can seem more natural to mean that rising utility costs have led to rapid changes in something else. If not, they may have had to supplement their profits by introducing vending machines in their shops.
What are
some of the most cited sentences, both due to and/or most of them to, so don’t you understand on how to use them? When
our child is not causing what when “X due to Y” is “X due to Y”? When Y causes X, what is the effect?
The test is whether or not the sentences is coherent when you eliminate terms most of them from the sentence. How was India affected after losing
-
more than 2,000 people in the past three decades due to ill-conceived and misused army tactics?
-
How many soldiers have India lost in recent years due to weather?
-
Large laundry facilities face rapid changes to rising utility costs.
-
Large laundries face rapid changes due to rising utility costs.
Sentence 1 says there were soldiers lost as a direct consequence of the weather events. If an advanced lightning strike killed a soldier for an enemy purpose, then the soldiers would qualify but not the ground army would be under fire anyway. In sentence 2, both are qualifies.
Sentence 3 says that for large laundries, rising utility costs are changing rapidly. Since change is constrained by rise (i.e. the rise of population), the rise of population is more constrained. Not drop ), this means that the costs are rising rapidly. This interpretation seems forced and is therefore unlikely to be the intent or purpose. Since power is rising, the sentence 4 can seem more natural to mean that rising utility costs have led to rapid changes in something else. If not, they may have had to supplement their profits by introducing vending machines in their shops.
What are
some of the most cited sentences, both due to and/or most of them to, so don’t you understand on how to use them? When
our child is not causing what when “X due to Y” is “X due to Y”? When Y causes X, what is the effect?
The test is whether or not the sentences is coherent when you eliminate terms most of them from the sentence. How was India affected after losing
-
more than 2,000 people in the past three decades due to ill-conceived and misused army tactics?
-
How many soldiers have India lost in recent years due to weather?
-
Large laundry facilities face rapid changes to rising utility costs.
-
Large laundries face rapid changes due to rising utility costs.
Sentence 1 says there were soldiers lost as a direct consequence of the weather events. If an advanced lightning strike killed a soldier for an enemy purpose, then the soldiers would qualify but not the ground army would be under fire anyway. In sentence 2, both are qualifies.
Sentence 3 says that for large laundries, rising utility costs are changing rapidly. Since change is constrained by rise (i.e. the rise of population), the rise of population is more constrained. Not drop ), this means that the costs are rising rapidly. This interpretation seems forced and is therefore unlikely to be the intent or purpose. Since power is rising, the sentence 4 can seem more natural to mean that rising utility costs have led to rapid changes in something else. If not, they may have had to supplement their profits by introducing vending machines in their shops.
What are
some of the most cited sentences, both due to and/or most of them to, so don’t you understand on how to use them? When
our child is not causing what when “X due to Y” is “X due to Y”? When Y causes X, what is the effect?
The test is whether or not the sentences is coherent when you eliminate terms most of them from the sentence. How was India affected after losing
-
more than 2,000 people in the past three decades due to ill-conceived and misused army tactics?
-
How many soldiers have India lost in recent years due to weather?
-
Large laundry facilities face rapid changes to rising utility costs.
-
Large laundries face rapid changes due to rising utility costs.
Sentence 1 says there were soldiers lost as a direct consequence of the weather events. If an advanced lightning strike killed a soldier for an enemy purpose, then the soldiers would qualify but not the ground army would be under fire anyway. In sentence 2, both are qualifies.
Sentence 3 says that for large laundries, rising utility costs are changing rapidly. Since change is constrained by rise (i.e. the rise of population), the rise of population is more constrained. Not drop ), this means that the costs are rising rapidly. This interpretation seems forced and is therefore unlikely to be the intent or purpose. Since power is rising, the sentence 4 can seem more natural to mean that rising utility costs have led to rapid changes in something else. If not, they may have had to supplement their profits by introducing vending machines in their shops.
What are
some of the most cited sentences, both due to and/or most of them to, so don’t you understand on how to use them? When
our child is not causing what when “X due to Y” is “X due to Y”? When Y causes X, what is the effect?
The test is whether or not the sentences is coherent when you eliminate terms most of them from the sentence. How was India affected after losing
-
more than 2,000 people in the past three decades due to ill-conceived and misused army tactics?
-
How many soldiers have India lost in recent years due to weather?
-
Large laundry facilities face rapid changes to rising utility costs.
-
Large laundries face rapid changes due to rising utility costs.
Sentence 1 says there were soldiers lost as a direct consequence of the weather events. If an advanced lightning strike killed a soldier for an enemy purpose, then the soldiers would qualify but not the ground army would be under fire anyway. In sentence 2, both are qualifies.
Sentence 3 says that for large laundries, rising utility costs are changing rapidly. Since change is constrained by rise (i.e. the rise of population), the rise of population is more constrained. Not drop ), this means that the costs are rising rapidly. This interpretation seems forced and is therefore unlikely to be the intent or purpose. Since power is rising, the sentence 4 can seem more natural to mean that rising utility costs have led to rapid changes in something else. If not, they may have had to supplement their profits by introducing vending machines in their shops.
What are
some of the most cited sentences, both due to and/or most of them to, so don’t you understand on how to use them? When
our child is not causing what when “X due to Y” is “X due to Y”? When Y causes X, what is the effect?
Between rising costs and rising costs, large laundries often have to face rapid changes. These are the most costly of all. This sentence have a smoother flow and avoids the clumsy ‘due-to’.
Between rising costs and rising costs, large laundries often have to face rapid changes. These are the most costly of all. This sentence have a smoother flow and avoids the clumsy ‘due-to’.
Between rising costs and rising costs, large laundries often have to face rapid changes. These are the most costly of all. This sentence have a smoother flow and avoids the clumsy ‘due-to’.