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Gillyflower Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

being used to drive

Hi,
I'm listing the inclusion criteria for a study. Is "being used to drive" correct in this context?
"inclusion criteria: Healthy female nurses, aged 20-40 years, with at least 1 year of experience, having driver's license and being used to drive, and having worked only one shift, either night or morning, during the past 24 hours."
  

Top answer

I'd use driving rather than drive there. I'd also write having a driver's license .

  • I'd use driving rather than drive there.
  • I'd also write having a driver's license .
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3 Answers
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I'd use driving rather than drive there. I'd also write having a driver's license.
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Thanks for your reply. You mean I should correct my writing this way?:
...having a driver's license and being used to driving...?
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gillyflowerThanks for your reply. You mean I should correct my writing this way?:...having a driver's license and being used to driving...?
Yes, that's what I had in mind.

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