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Usenet Posted 21 years ago
Learning

Prepare or Prepare for?

Dear All
I would like to know if there is any rules/reasons governing the use of 'prepare' and 'prepare for' in a sentence.
Thanks a lot for your advice and help.
Regards
Rolita
  

Top answer

[nq:1]I would like to know if there is[/nq] "are", not "is". [/nq] In what sentence? Be specific, please.

  • [nq:1]I would like to know if there is[/nq] "are", not "is".
  • [/nq] In what sentence?
  • Be specific, please.
  • Or do you mean in all possible sentences that might contain "prepare" or "prepare for"?
  • Good grief, Rolita!
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3 Answers
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[nq:1]I would like to know if there is[/nq]
"are", not "is".
[nq:1]any rules/reasons governing the use of 'prepare' and 'prepare for' in a sentence.[/nq]
In what sentence? Be specific, please. Or do you mean in all possible sentences that might contain "prepare" or "prepare for"? Good grief, Rolita! How can you ask such a question?Why don't you try to use these two different verbs in a
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[nq:1]I would like to know if there is any rules/reasons governing the use of 'prepare' and 'prepare for' in a sentence.[/nq]
The usual way is
(subject) prepare (object - what is being prepared) for (purpose or event, reason why the preparation is happening)
Examples:
The teacher prepares the exam.
The teacher prepares the exam for the students.
The students prepare for the
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Thanks very much for your help & explanation.=A0 It's very clear & helpfu= l
indeed.
Rolita

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