He avoids strenuous exercise due to health reasons.
Can "due to" be used with "reasons", since " due to" means "because".
Thanks!
tamguatlay Can "due to" be used with "reasons", since " due to" means "because". "
New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.
tamguatlayCan "due to" be used with "reasons", since " due to" means "because".
Well, you can't say "He avoids strenuous exercise because health reasons." Use "for" with "reasons": "He avoids strenuous exercise for health reasons."