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Anonymous Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

"A testament" or "testament"

Does the following make sense as it is:

I was selected to complete an audit, which is testament to my high attention to detail.

I'm wondering if I need to say "a testament".
  

Top answer

I was selected to complete an audit, which is a testament to my high attention to detail.

  • I was selected to complete an audit, which is a testament to my high attention to detail.
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5 Answers
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I was selected to complete an audit, which is a testament to my high attention to detail.
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In my opinion both "is testament to" and "is a testament to" are acceptable.

I have slight misgivings about "high attention to detail". Can one's attention to detail be "high"?
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GPYCan one's attention to detail be "high"?
To me, high attention to detail is fine.
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I think it's one's level of attention that is high, not one's attention.
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Anonymousmy high attention to detail.
Simply 'my attention to detail' is sufficient to convey the idea.

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