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Asked on December 24, 2021 in Word choice.
What is the difference between “for” and “because”? -The
relationship between these two acts, the verb for and for sounds slightly classic and informal. I am late, for the roads were very snowy this morning.” both work, but “because” is more commonly used.
-“For” is used as a preposition. ” because” isn’t. I stopped for lunch.” But if you are having lunch, you could say it for lunch. In some cases, you can use “because of” but it often has a slightly different meaning than “for. ” I stopped for lunch – what exactly is involved? Is it silly to stop eating lunch or something that’s good for you just because other people are getting it? I stopped at the train station in Toronto with lunch. Do you see the person
on the train saying “I stopped for lunch”?”?
- 198640 views
- 7 answers
- 72829 votes
-
Asked on December 24, 2021 in Word choice.
What is the difference between “for” and “because”? -The
relationship between these two acts, the verb for and for sounds slightly classic and informal. I am late, for the roads were very snowy this morning.” both work, but “because” is more commonly used.
-“For” is used as a preposition. ” because” isn’t. I stopped for lunch.” But if you are having lunch, you could say it for lunch. In some cases, you can use “because of” but it often has a slightly different meaning than “for. ” I stopped for lunch – what exactly is involved? Is it silly to stop eating lunch or something that’s good for you just because other people are getting it? I stopped at the train station in Toronto with lunch. Do you see the person
on the train saying “I stopped for lunch”?”?
- 198640 views
- 7 answers
- 72829 votes
-
Asked on December 24, 2021 in Word choice.
What is the difference between “for” and “because”? -The
relationship between these two acts, the verb for and for sounds slightly classic and informal. I am late, for the roads were very snowy this morning.” both work, but “because” is more commonly used.
-“For” is used as a preposition. ” because” isn’t. I stopped for lunch.” But if you are having lunch, you could say it for lunch. In some cases, you can use “because of” but it often has a slightly different meaning than “for. ” I stopped for lunch – what exactly is involved? Is it silly to stop eating lunch or something that’s good for you just because other people are getting it? I stopped at the train station in Toronto with lunch. Do you see the person
on the train saying “I stopped for lunch”?”?
- 198640 views
- 7 answers
- 72829 votes
-
Asked on November 13, 2021 in Grammar.
Why is it possible to have two populations? How is England, France and Spain compared to Germany? So, do you see a question about if multiple species, similar to a single species, exist? Does the country have a large population? Why? Is it just a list?
I don’t think it’s a well-worded question, because “much population” is awkward too.
- 319748 views
- 106 answers
- 118140 votes
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Asked on November 13, 2021 in Grammar.
Why is it possible to have two populations? How is England, France and Spain compared to Germany? So, do you see a question about if multiple species, similar to a single species, exist? Does the country have a large population? Why? Is it just a list?
I don’t think it’s a well-worded question, because “much population” is awkward too.
- 319748 views
- 106 answers
- 118140 votes
-
Asked on November 13, 2021 in Grammar.
Why is it possible to have two populations? How is England, France and Spain compared to Germany? So, do you see a question about if multiple species, similar to a single species, exist? Does the country have a large population? Why? Is it just a list?
I don’t think it’s a well-worded question, because “much population” is awkward too.
- 319748 views
- 106 answers
- 118140 votes
-
Asked on November 12, 2021 in Grammar.
Why is it possible to have two populations? How is England, France and Spain compared to Germany? So, do you see a question about if multiple species, similar to a single species, exist? Does the country have a large population? Why? Is it just a list?
I don’t think it’s a well-worded question, because “much population” is awkward too.
- 319748 views
- 106 answers
- 118140 votes
-
Asked on November 12, 2021 in Grammar.
Why is it possible to have two populations? How is England, France and Spain compared to Germany? So, do you see a question about if multiple species, similar to a single species, exist? Does the country have a large population? Why? Is it just a list?
I don’t think it’s a well-worded question, because “much population” is awkward too.
- 319748 views
- 106 answers
- 118140 votes
-
Asked on November 10, 2021 in Grammar.
Why is it possible to have two populations? How is England, France and Spain compared to Germany? So, do you see a question about if multiple species, similar to a single species, exist? Does the country have a large population? Why? Is it just a list?
I don’t think it’s a well-worded question, because “much population” is awkward too.
- 319748 views
- 106 answers
- 118140 votes
-
Asked on November 8, 2021 in Grammar.
Why is it possible to have two populations? How is England, France and Spain compared to Germany? So, do you see a question about if multiple species, similar to a single species, exist? Does the country have a large population? Why? Is it just a list?
I don’t think it’s a well-worded question, because “much population” is awkward too.
- 319748 views
- 106 answers
- 118140 votes