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experience, of, in or with - WordReference Forums English--U S Jun 10, 2009 #2 I am not sure if the phrase "to have experience of" is commonly used "In" and "with" are more frequently used with it I would think that to have experience in something refers to a particular field For example, "I have a lot of experience in sales and marketing" or "I have experience in teaching "
From In my experience-preposition - WordReference Forums Oct 14, 2014 #5 e2efour said: 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
Wide experience - WordReference Forums You can say "wide experience", which is why you get google hits, but it doesn't match this context "Wide experience" is used when talking about a variety of experience, whereas vast extensive are used when talking about a lot of experience Since the sentence doesn't indicate any kind of range of different experiences, wide doesn't fit
collect acquire gain get experience - WordReference Forums Russian Dec 19, 2010 #1 When we do something new we get new experience no matter whether or not we have succeeded This experience can be both positive and negative or simply good and bad I know that we can say "gain experience" and "get experience", but how about the following constructions: 1) They collected much experience after working
15 years experience - WordReference Forums The test is what we say with one: we say one year z experience, not one year experience So the S indicates a genitive, so plural 15 years' is correct (and one year's) Distinguish this from one year of experience, fifteen years of experience
Experience Professional Experience Work Experience Jan 31, 2012 #2 If I were including other experiences in the resume, I might use (b) or (c) If everything in the resume is 100% work-related, (a) might be acceptable Be sure that you're distinguishing between a work "history" and work "experience" "Experience" connotes work that is specific to the job for which you are applying, while a
To make an experience - WordReference Forums Jun 27, 2014 #1 Hello everyone In a message I sent to an American friend, I wrote ''I made that experience,too'', meaning that in the past I have had the same experience In many languages (e g Italian, German) the construction ''to make an experience'' is quite common, but English dictionaries only suggest 'to have an experience'
3-year v. 3 years experience - WordReference Forums A "three-year experience" means that you had an experience that lasted three years For example: "I lived in France in the 1990s It was a wonderful three-year experience" "This position requires three years' experience" means, as you know, work experience Frankly, I dislike this shortening of the proper phrase which is, in my mind "three
a large experience - WordReference Forums May 6, 2008 #10 When you say "an" experience, you are referring to a single experience, like "I had an interesting experience while I was in Italy " But when you are referring to experience that you acquired while working on a job, you refer to it as experience collectively "Strong" just isn't a word used to describe experience