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Ben9108 Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

With effected from

I would like to clarify the sentence below. Whether using "effected" is correct or not in the sentence.


I would like to inform you that the below staff changes with effected from 01 May 2018.

  

Top answer

"with effected from" is ungrammatical. The grammatical phrase is "with effect from", but this does not properly fit the rest of the sentence. Here is one way to fix it: I would like to inform you that the following staff changes take/took effect from 1 May 2018.

  • "with effected from" is ungrammatical.
  • The grammatical phrase is "with effect from", but this does not properly fit the rest of the sentence.
  • Here is one way to fix it: I would like to inform you that the following staff changes take/took effect from 1 May 2018.
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2 Answers
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"with effected from" is ungrammatical. The grammatical phrase is "with effect from", but this does not properly fit the rest of the sentence. Here is one way to fix it:

I would like to inform you that the following staff changes take/took effect from 1 May 2018.

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Please comment on the revised sentences below. Thanks


I would like to inform you that the following staff was promoted with effect from 01 May 2018.

I would like to inform you that the following staff had a new arrangement effective from 01 May 2018.

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