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Anonymous Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

to make the case for

Does "to make the case for" mean "to explain the situation in order for"?
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Mental health does not lack political support. This month, the World Bank and the World Health Organization (WHO) will together address the broader development community to make the case for investment in mental health. In the past three years...
  

Top answer

Anonymous Does "to make the case for" mean "to explain the situation in order for"? Roughly, yes: 'present supporting evidence for'.

  • Anonymous Does "to make the case for" mean "to explain the situation in order for"?
  • Roughly, yes: 'present supporting evidence for'.
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1 Answers
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AnonymousDoes "to make the case for" mean "to explain the situation in order for"?
Roughly, yes: 'present supporting evidence for'.

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