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Anonymous Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

I will quit the job because of money. VS. I will quit the job for money.

I will quit the job because of money. VS. I will quit the job for money.

In this case, which one is natural to you? And do you think 'for' and 'because of' are interchangeable all the time? Thank you so much and take good care.
  

Top answer

Anonymous... I will quit the job because of the money. ) I will quit the job for money.

  • Anonymous...
  • I will quit the job because of the money.
  • ) I will quit the job for money.
  • not a good sentence In this case, which one is natural to you?
  • And do you think 'for' and 'because of' are interchangeable all the time?
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3 Answers
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Anonymous...I will quit the job because of the money.
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Thank you so much as usual and do you mean sometimes they can be interchangeable for the same meaning, right? If you do not mind, could you show me any examples? Thank you for your time and help.
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AnonymousThank you so much as usual and do you mean sometimes they can be interchangeable for the same meaning, right? If you do not mind, could you show me any examples? Thank you for your time and help.
Yes, they can be interchangeable, but the grammar can be different. But native speakers rarely use "for" to mean "because". (I never use it).

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