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Seagull Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

As a matter of course

Hello everyone I have a couple of questions.

Regarding the following two sentences:

(A) In one or two decades, many of what you find impossible will have been realized as a matter of course.

(B) In one or two decades, many of what you find impossible will have been realized as if they should have been.

Can we use (B) to mean the same thing as (A)? What clauses or phrases can successfully replace the expression "as a matter of course"?

  

Top answer

seagull Can we use (B) to mean the same thing as (A)? No. That completely misses the meaning.

  • seagull Can we use (B) to mean the same thing as (A)?
  • No.
  • That completely misses the meaning.
  • H8ntdI6xRtI CJ
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1 Answers
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seagullCan we use (B) to mean the same thing as (A)?

No. That completely misses the meaning.

See

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