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Anonymous Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

doubt

Please, could you tell me wich of the following phrases is correct?

1 - something offers quality and confidence for the person to do much more.

2 - something offers quality and confidence to the person who wants to do much more.

Tks in advance Emotion: wink
  

Top answer

None of the above sentences has clear meaning. What are you trying to say? My first instinct to 'quality' and 'confidence' is about something commercial, however, the rest of the sentence doesn't seem to connect semantically.

  • None of the above sentences has clear meaning.
  • What are you trying to say?
  • My first instinct to 'quality' and 'confidence' is about something commercial, however, the rest of the sentence doesn't seem to connect semantically.
  • What is that 'something' that offers 'quality' and 'confidence' ?
  • Anonymous Tks in advance No, 'thanks in advance'.
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5 Answers
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None of the above sentences has clear meaning. What are you trying to say? My first instinct to 'quality' and 'confidence' is about something commercial, however, the rest of the sentence doesn't seem to connect semantically.
What is that 'something' that offers 'quality' and 'confidence' ?
AnonymousTks in advance
No, 't
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Technically they are both correct, however, the first one sounds much better.
--native speaker
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I want to say that when you have something reliable, it helps you to do (execute) your stuff better (better than when you don't have it).
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No offense Native Speaker. But did you really seriously consider the sentences sensibly correct? I am still pondering on how to make sense of them. Maybe you can tell me what they mean in your interpretation.

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