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Anonymous Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

"of " or "for"

"soil of corruption" or "soil for corruption"? Do they mean the same? In this case ,what's the difference between "of "and "for "?
  

Top answer

We cannot judge without seeing the complete context.

  • We cannot judge without seeing the complete context.
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3 Answers
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We cannot judge without seeing the complete context.
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We should eradicate the soil for/of corruption. Do both of them work here ,any meaning difference?
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AnonymousDo both of them work here ,any meaning difference?
Neither works, actually, if you are talking about real soil. And what do you mean by 'corruption'? Pollutants? Or are you speaking metaphorically?

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