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Lereve Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

'at' or 'of'

Hi,

There's no doubt whatsoever in my mind that this was an attempt at mass murder."

Can I substitute 'of' in the place of 'at'? if yes, is there a meaning difference?
  

Top answer

At, I'm sure. It all sounds better with -ing . ]

  • At, I'm sure.
  • It all sounds better with -ing .
  • ]
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1 Answers
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At, I'm sure.
It all sounds better with -ing. [That was his attempt at being funny.]

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