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Anonymous Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

Question about question

Is it just a job to you or do you actually care about/for your clients and their problems?


Would this question be meaningful to ask a psychologist? (It's for a story I'm writing, so I'm not going to ask this) Is it phrased naturally?

Should it be "care about" or "care for"?

  

Top answer

Is it just a job to you or do you actually care about / for your clients and their problems? Would this question be meaningful to ask a psychologist? It's OK.

  • Is it just a job to you or do you actually care about / for your clients and their problems?
  • Would this question be meaningful to ask a psychologist?
  • It's OK.
  • (It's for a story I'm writing, so I'm not going to ask this) Is it phrased naturally?
  • Should it be "care about" or "care for"?
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2 Answers
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Is it just a job to you or do you actually care about/for your clients and their problems?


Would this question be meaningful to ask a psychologist? It's OK. (It's for a story I'm writing, so I'm not going to ask this) Is it phrased naturally?

Should it be "care about" or "care for"?

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anonymousIs it just a job to you or do you actually care about your clients/patients and their problems?

If the psychologist is working for a corporation, or something like that, then keep "clients". If he's treating individuals with psychological problems, then say "patients".

Otherwise, fine.

CJ

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