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Cho7712 Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

meaning

What does the following underlined phrase mean?
More specifically, what meaning of 'as' in here?

"It seems to me that, going about the thing as you have
been, you ought to approach the problem from a totally
different angle."
  

Top answer

going about the thing as you have been = doing things in the way that you have previously been doing them

  • going about the thing as you have been = doing things in the way that you have previously been doing them
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2 Answers
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going about the thing as you have been = doing things in the way that you have previously been doing them
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