0
Rommel Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

‘At,’ ‘to,’ or ‘up to’?

Which preposition fits in the given sentence? I think it’s to.

There may still be no approved treatments for this disease (at, to, up to) this very moment, but nothing is impossible with the human minds.

Just a comment: I wonder why the writer had to include the clause but nothing is impossible with the human minds. Would it be more understandable if she wrote but nothing is impossible with humans?
  

Top answer

Rommel Which preposition fits in the given sentence? I think it’s to. What you were trying to do with the previous sentence (about Ebola) should be done to this one.

  • Rommel Which preposition fits in the given sentence?
  • I think it’s to.
  • What you were trying to do with the previous sentence (about Ebola) should be done to this one.
  • The last phrase of the first clause is quite unnecessary.
  • There may still be no approved treatments for this disease, but nothing is impossible for the human mind .
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

1 Answers
0
RommelWhich preposition fits in the given sentence? I think it’s to.
What you were trying to do with the previous sentence (about Ebola) should be done to this one. The last phrase of the first clause is quite unnecessary.

There may still be no approved treatments for this disease, but nothing is impossible for the human mi

Related Questions