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Thezul Posted 22 years ago
Grammar

Relate to OR relate with

what're the differences btween 'related to' and 'related with'???? plsss help me...
  

Top answer

You are "related to" someone if they are a member of your family. An object is related to another object if both share certain common properties. A area of study is related to another area if there is overlapping subject matter.

  • You are "related to" someone if they are a member of your family.
  • An object is related to another object if both share certain common properties.
  • A area of study is related to another area if there is overlapping subject matter.
  • And so on.
  • "Related with" means the same thing as "related to" but is much less commonly used.
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1 Answers
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You are "related to" someone if they are a member of your family. An object is related to another object if both share certain common properties. A area of study is related to another area if there is overlapping subject matter. And so on.

"Related with" means the same thing as "related to" but is much less commonly used. A search on Google showed "related to" as being 40 times more com

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