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Anonymous Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

Record of vs record for

The SCR is an electronic record of important patient information, created from GP medical records. It can be seen and used by authorised staff in other areas of the health and care system involved in the patient's direct care.

Which meaning of preposition "of" is used here in "record of important information"?

if we use "for", what would the sentence mean? and would it be still grammatical?

  

Top answer

If you use "for" here, you are expressing purpose, that the purpose of the record is important patient information. Using "of" instead is not emphasizing a purpose, but simply informing what is in the record. It has the same meaning as "of" in the sentence "The table and chairs were made of oak".

  • If you use "for" here, you are expressing purpose, that the purpose of the record is important patient information.
  • Using "of" instead is not emphasizing a purpose, but simply informing what is in the record.
  • It has the same meaning as "of" in the sentence "The table and chairs were made of oak".
  • Using "for" would be grammatical but change the nuance a bit.
  • It would mean that the record was intended to store important patient information despite, what it may actually contain,
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1 Answers
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If you use "for" here, you are expressing purpose, that the purpose of the record is important patient information. Using "of" instead is not emphasizing a purpose, but simply informing what is in the record. It has the same meaning as "of" in the sentence "The table and chairs were made of oak".

Using "for" would be grammatical but change the nuance a bit. It would mean that the reco

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