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Anonymous Posted 4 years ago
Grammar

As / Since

As we don't have site access today, we will send our techinician to the site tomorrow.

Since we don't have site access today, we will send our techinician to the site tomorrow.

We don't have site access today, so we will send our techinician to the site tomorrow.

Please tell me which one is grammatically worded and appropriate one?

  

Top answer

anonymous Please tell me which one is grammatically worded and appropriate one? They are all correct enough, perfectly understandable, and mean the same thing. "As" is a bit more formal, and there are still people who don't like to use "since" that way.

  • anonymous Please tell me which one is grammatically worded and appropriate one?
  • They are all correct enough, perfectly understandable, and mean the same thing.
  • "As" is a bit more formal, and there are still people who don't like to use "since" that way.
  • My problem with all three is that when you look closely, they are illogical.
  • The fact that you have no access today does not mean that you will come tomorrow.
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1 Answers
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anonymousPlease tell me which one is grammatically worded and appropriate one?

They are all correct enough, perfectly understandable, and mean the same thing. "As" is a bit more formal, and there are still people who don't like to use "since" that way. My problem with all three is that when you look closely, they are illogical. The fact that you have no acc

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