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Gene93 Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

With good reason/for good reason

Hello,

I've encountered both, but I am not sure which one's more common in everyday speech.

- I refused to show him my passport, and with/for good reason.

Which one is more common in your experience?


Thank you.

  

Top answer

and with good reason The other one doesn't sound good.

  • and with good reason The other one doesn't sound good.
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1 Answers
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and with good reason

The other one doesn't sound good.

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