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Usenet Posted 22 years ago
Usage

Is a preposition after "replying" required?

Would it be wrong to write
"... upon replying your letter, I queried my boss to see "

as opposed to
"... upon replying to your letter, I queried my boss to see " ?

If it's wrong, what differs "replying" from other -ing-formed verbs (remind me of the correct expression here, please), like e.g "beating", which wouldn't require a preposition? Are there any differences between American English and British English in this matter?

My teacher claimed a preposition was necessary without question. Is he correct?
  

Top answer

[nq:1]Would it be wrong to write "... upon replying your letter, I queried my boss to see " as opposed ... American English and British English in this matter?

  • [nq:1]Would it be wrong to write "...
  • upon replying your letter, I queried my boss to see " as opposed ...
  • American English and British English in this matter?
  • My teacher claimed a preposition was necessary without question.
  • [/nq] In sentences of the form you are asking about, your teacher is correct.
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2 Answers
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[nq:1]Would it be wrong to write "... upon replying your letter, I queried my boss to see " as opposed ... American English and British English in this matter? My teacher claimed a preposition was necessary without question. Is he correct?[/nq]
In sentences of the form you are asking about, your teacher is correct. "Reply" is primarily an intranstive verb, and intransitive verbs are by definit
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[nq:1]Would it be wrong to write "... upon replying your letter, I queried my boss to see " as opposed ... American English and British English in this matter? My teacher claimed a preposition was necessary without question. Is he correct?[/nq]
Yes, he is correct. The -ing ending is not what matters. "Reply" is an intransitive verb - it doesn't take an object. You have to "reply to" a letter;

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