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Tenjing Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

as for

As for today, this is enough. Vs for today, this is enough. Do 'as for' and 'for' the same in meaning? How does 'as for' differ from 'for'? Please explain.
  

Top answer

The natural way to say this is: This is enough (work, practice, etc) for today.

  • The natural way to say this is: This is enough (work, practice, etc) for today.
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3 Answers
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The natural way to say this is:

This is enough (work, practice, etc) for today.
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Thank a lot, Mam. But I am trying to know when to use 'as for'? Could you please tell me the its meaning and some sentences with it?
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As for... usually begins a sentence. It means "concerning." Usually it is in a discussion, and addresses the last, or remaining point of discussion.

Discussion about an on-line survey:

While the majority of questions take just a few minutes to answer, some of them may take hours of research. Only 60 percent of the questions were responded to within 10 minutes. As

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