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Anonymous Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

He's good ___ his job.

"He is very good/ competent ___ his job."

Should I use "in" or "at"?

Can either be used?

If so, is there a difference in meaning?

THANK YOU
  

Top answer

" Good at , but competent in . There is not much difference in meaning .

  • " Good at , but competent in .
  • There is not much difference in meaning .
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2 Answers
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"He is very good/ competent ___ his job."

Good at , but competent in .

There is not much difference in meaning .
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Thank you very much, Jhumjhum.

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