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- I have experience of working with . . . or . . of work with
I have experience working with (no "of") The COCA (AE Corpus) has many examples of have experience of + gerund Here is one - Well, we have experience of operating in regimes in every part of the world, and they cover many different political shades So we will use our expertise to try to push the boundaries of what can be reported (Source)
- work experience or working experience? - WordReference Forums
Hi, "For job-seekers who wish to relocate or would like to gain overseas work experience, the Internet may be the only way to find information about relevant non-local positions and submit applications speedily and cost-effectively " I have two questions: 1) "work experience" or " working
- experience, of, in or with - WordReference Forums
Hey everyone, Im trying to explain to a friend of mine the difference between having experience in of with and to tell you the truth think Ive done more damage than good with my rambling explanations so heres hoping we can get some collective explanations on the subject I have a lot of
- From In my experience-preposition - WordReference Forums
From my experience is possible, but not common (at least in BE) For example, if you look at the British National Corpus, you find 19 examples, compared with 194 for in my experience In the US corpus (COCA) there is a similar pattern: 165 from compared with 750 in (Judging) from my experience, it is true
- experience of doing in doing - WordReference Forums
I agree Sophie, 'experience in' often relates to an activity in which it is possible to become proficient or specialise; where different degrees of experience can be gained 'Experience of' is broader and relates to one's exposure to something (a place, activity, emotion, etc) However I feel that (A) is of course correct, but (B) is possibly incorrect (it anyway jars slightly), unless it is
- He was puzzled with about by the problem. - WordReference Forums
John seemed puzzled about what the question meant About sounds reasonable and fairly likely in this sentence I have no rules to suggest here, Joseph I rely on my experience and my ear for spoken English to guide me in my opinions about what sounds natural
- 3-year v. 3 years experience - WordReference Forums
3-year experience and 3 years' experience: 10-day vacation and 10 days' vacation: 4-week training and 4 weeks' training: 100-year history and 100 years' history? I think they are all used, right? I know some exceptions such as "2 weeks' notice"--maybe, it's idiomatic but you wouldn't say "2 week notice," would you? Please help Many thanks in
- I had never Never had I - WordReference Forums
Greetings Fellows, Hope you are doing fine, I need help regarding a type of sentence which I'm not sure about, Please see this example, 1) I had never felt so distinctly 2) Never had I so distinctly felt Eventhough the above sentences have same meaning but the 2 sounds way better and catch
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