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Panda file 267 Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

What do they mean?

I am deaf, sometimes have a hard time understanding some phases. I have been seen two particular phases that kind of bothers me for a few weeks, and the phases are 'as of' and 'as at.' What do they mean? Please explain clear as you can, use them in some grammar that could help me to understand better.

  

Top answer

panda file 267 phases You mean "ph r ases". g. "Your bank balance is £100 as of/at 22 Feb 2019".

  • panda file 267 phases You mean "ph r ases".
  • g.
  • "Your bank balance is £100 as of/at 22 Feb 2019".
  • There is no difference in meaning; both are a bit jargony, but to me "as at" seems more so.
  • "as of", but not "as at", can also be used to indicate a time when something starts.
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1 Answers
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panda file 267phases

You mean "phrases".

Both "as of" and "as at" can be used to indicate a point in time at which some situation or state of affairs prevails, e.g. "Your bank balance is £100 as of/at 22 Feb 2019". There is no difference in meaning; both are a bit jargony, but to me "as at" seems more so.

"as of", but not "as at", can a

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