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Anonymous Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

Commitment of/to time?

What I have learnt is "commitment of sb. to sth./sb."

However, I just saw an University webpage using "commitment of time" in its title.

I would like to know what the difference is among them.
  

Top answer

Anonymous difference "commitment of sb. " is more completely "somebody's commitment of sth to sth/sb". my commitment of time to this project / the company's commitment of resources to the pension fund CJ

  • Anonymous difference "commitment of sb.
  • " is more completely "somebody's commitment of sth to sth/sb".
  • my commitment of time to this project / the company's commitment of resources to the pension fund CJ
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4 Answers
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Anonymousdifference
"commitment of sb. to sth./sb." is more completely "somebody's commitment of sth to sth/sb".

my commitment of time to this project / the company's commitment of resources to the pension fund

CJ
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Thank you for your reply.

I am a bit confused. Let's start from the beginning.
What is the difference between "commitment of and commitment to"?

I have seen others using "commitment to quality". Is it appropriate to say "This is my commitment of quality to this project"?
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Anonymousdifference between "commitment of and commitment to"?
commitment of the person making the commitment (also expressible as a possessive like my or his)
or
commitment of the resource
and
commitment to the goal
AnonymousIs it appropriate to say "This is my commitment of quality t
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Thank you Calif! This really helps me a lot!

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