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SuperESL Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

accomplish

Hi,

One says "the accomplishment of our objectives." Does one say "the accomplishment of our policies" in the sense of their coming to fruition, their realization (not 'the thing that our policies have accomplished')?

Thank you.
  

Top answer

SuperESL Does one say "the accomplishment of our policies" in the sense of their coming to fruition ... I don't. In my opinion it makes better sense to say "the success of our policies" or "the failure of our policies".

  • SuperESL Does one say "the accomplishment of our policies" in the sense of their coming to fruition ...
  • I don't.
  • In my opinion it makes better sense to say "the success of our policies" or "the failure of our policies".
  • CJ
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2 Answers
0
SuperESLDoes one say "the accomplishment of our policies" in the sense of their coming to fruition ...
I don't. In my opinion it makes better sense to say "the success of our policies" or "the failure of our policies".

CJ

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