- prepositions - What is the difference between information on about . . .
With information, in the context you gave, of can only indicate ownership possession It is otherwise incorrect Information of your family Means information belonging to your family To say information relating to something, we can use about or on For example: My family has a history of diabetes This is information on my family or about my
- Provide information on, of or about something?
The documents contain information of great importance The intercepted information was of little merit This doesn't speak about the subject, the actual content of the information but about the information itself: 'of questionable value', 'of no interest to me', 'of utmost urgency' This is a rather formal, official form
- grammaticality - Information on? for? about? - English Language . . .
The phrase "information for" can be used as well, but that generally means something different, and would be structured accordingly – J R ♦ Commented Sep 17, 2015 at 15:19
- plural forms - Information or Informations? - English Language Learners . . .
Information is a non-countable noun (you can't have 4 informations), so it is neither singular nor plural
- All information or All the information oceans or the oceans
All 1) the information I get from fish is used to manage 2) the oceans better I want to know how the two 'the' worked in the sentences How about the following sentence? All information I get from fish is used to manage oceans better Is the sentence completely wrong, or is this one different from the previous one
- phrase meaning - for your information or for your notification . . .
Consider, "For your information, I DO have a PHD in Warp Field Dynamics, and I have 21 years of experience working with star ship engines " When you hear this, you can tell the person is being defensive, but when you are reading a message, it is harder to tell intent
- grammar - so or such useful information - English Language Learners . . .
In your proposed construction, you have to use "such " The word "so" can't be applied directly to an attributive adjective (i e an adjective that directly modifies a noun)
- difference - Inform about vs Inform of vs Inform on - English . . .
This question concerns 'inform on' also, and so doesn't duplicate inform about vs inform of (where user 'Maulik V' asserts the following that I edited): Inform her of X = Here, we are informing
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