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Joe2012 Posted 16 years ago
Grammar

Regarding a preposition

Sentence: "You have to tweak the settings to get best of/from the features."

My question: Which preposition would be correct in the sentence, of or from?

Thanks and regards
  

Top answer

best of = only the very good features best from = the very good qualities [all features included]

  • best of = only the very good features best from = the very good qualities [all features included]
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4 Answers
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best of = only the very good features

best from = the very good qualities [all features included]
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RazerSentence: "You have to tweak the settings to get best of/from the features."
Consider the same structure:
You have to tweak/ tune/ adjust the position of the dish antena to get the best TV reception. I do think you need a prep. for this sentence. That's my opinion.
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If you're talking about "...best TV reception," I don't see the need for a preposition.

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