Hello dear teachers,
What's wrong with the following use of " by means of"?
By means of English, I managed to make plenty of good friends.
The given sentence is readily understandable and grammatically acceptable, but the phrase "by means of English" is a little unusual. " Moreover, the phrase itself - "by means of" - is infrequently heard in English today; it had its heyday in the 1950s and 1960s.
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The given sentence is readily understandable and grammatically acceptable, but the phrase "by means of English" is a little unusual. The phrase "by means of" is typically not used together with the word "English." Moreover, the phrase itself - "by means of" - is infrequently heard in English today; it had its heyday in the 1950s and 1960s.
Siavash MoghaddasianWhat's wrong with the following use of " by means of"?
I'm not quite sure, but something is. "English" seems insufficient in and of itself to be the means of anything. There is a conflict between "by means of" and "managed". "Plenty" is used oddly—it sound defensive somehow. I think you mean something more like "Thanks to my growing prof