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Tashiro Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

Arrange for a flight vs arrange a flight

Hi, could you please help me?

Which is correct, "arrange for a flight" or "arrange a flight"?

If both are OK, is there any difference?
  

Top answer

They're both correct. "Arrange a flight" would mean to determine what flight is best for your purposes and book a ticket. , plus booking the ticket.

  • They're both correct.
  • "Arrange a flight" would mean to determine what flight is best for your purposes and book a ticket.
  • , plus booking the ticket.
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2 Answers
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They're both correct.

"Arrange a flight" would mean to determine what flight is best for your purposes and book a ticket.

"Arrange for a flight" would probably mean to attend to the details such as transportation to and from the airports, lodging etc., plus booking the ticket.

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