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Tuongvan Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

out of hatred

Hi teachers,

Can I say like this?:
He is bad-natured .He assigned Mr.Jack to do maintenance work not for the benefit of the company ,but out of his personal hatred .

Thank you in advance
  

Top answer

He assigned Jack / Mr Jones to do maintenance work out of his personal dislike , not for the benefit of the company.

  • He assigned Jack / Mr Jones to do maintenance work out of his personal dislike , not for the benefit of the company.
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2 Answers
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I would prefer to see it this way:

He is ill-natured .He assigned Jack / Mr Jones to do maintenance work out of his personal dislike, not for the benefit of the company.
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Thank you Mister Micawber very much

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