0
Angliholic Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

With regards to knowledge and experience, he is superior to other engineers

With regards to/As for/As to/Regarding/Concerning/According to knowledge and experience, he is superior to other engineers.

As far as knowledge and experience are concerned, he is superior to other engineers.

Are the above versions all but identical in meaning to you? If not, what are the subtle nuances? Thanks.
  

Top answer

[With regard s to/As for/As to/Regarding/Concerning/ According to ] knowledge and experience, ... As for and As to are less used with this meaning, IMO. They're all about the same in meaning, yes.

  • [With regard s to/As for/As to/Regarding/Concerning/ According to ] knowledge and experience, ...
  • As for and As to are less used with this meaning, IMO.
  • They're all about the same in meaning, yes.
  • CJ
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

2 Answers
0
[With regard s to/As for/As to/Regarding/Concerning/According to] knowledge and experience, ...

As for and As to are less used with this meaning, IMO.

They're all about the same in meaning, yes.

CJ
0
CalifJim[With regard s to/As for/As to/Regarding/Concerning/According to] knowledge and experience, ...

As for and As to are less used with this meaning, IMO.

They're all about the same in meaning, yes.

CJ
Thanks, Jim.

Related Questions