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  • grammaticality - Recommend you to vs. recommend that you - English . . .
    The example creates cognitive dissonance, because the syntax does not match the semantics: "to define" is the recommendation (or direct object), and "you" is the indirect object Oxford's example does not contradict this; "recommend somebody to do something" means that "somebody" is the recommendation, like in "I recommend John for the job "
  • grammar - Recommend you to [do something] or Recommend to you to [do . . .
    Technically speaking, as @Mustafa points out, there are some contexts where omitting the first "to" implies that the recommendation itself is being made to someone else, about you In practice this is rarely an issue - the intended meaning is invariably clear, and in most cases the advice is actually being given to "you"
  • Recommendation of vs. recommendation for – what is the difference?
    It can be a recommendation for any type of work (office work, construction, baby sitting, anything) My audience is North American, so the sentence should be written in standart English When the website that uses this sentence is released for public consumption I will post here the link to it and that will explain much better what I mean and want to convey
  • What is the person called whom you give a recommendation?
    If person A gives person B a recommendation, can you call A recommender and B recommendee— or are these words made up? I've seen both forms used in everyday language (e g magazines), but never in a dictionary or grammar book, or in literature Also, what is the process of creating recommendee or recommender out of recommendation called?
  • Use of as per vs per - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I certainly don't prefer per or even as per @kris The stated examples of use given by the OP are obscure and indistinct statements so weak of meaning that I suspect they are not used by a native speaker with any depth of experience or culture
  • meaning - Can I say I concur with something instead of I agree with . . .
    Hi I'm still learning English and I rather have problems with grammar So my question is can I use I concur with this statement instead of I agree with this statement Is it weird?
  • Using apostrophe when abbreviating recommendations as recos
    Write "recommendation" No, I don't So you use this abbreviation in writing only Is your audience familiar with this abbreviation? Yes, they are Then an apostrophe is unnecessary Avoid needless clutter, and just write "repo" No, they aren't
  • vocabulary - Whats a shorter way to say recommendation? - English . . .
    The word "commend" is almost half the length of recommendation, and it's similar enough in meaning to substitute for it E g , "I commend this movie to you," or "I commend this book to you for your reading pleasure " Since we're in the era of LOL, you could also use "TU" for thumbs up, and "TD" for thumbs down –
  • What are the differences between offer, propose, and suggest?
    The differences are of formality, weight, and exchange As Aaron's answer illustrates, offer has an element of exchange or cost implied
  • What is the word for someone who has been recommended?
    Because of the ambiguity, it would be better to use a different word for both what or who is recommended (that might be subject, perhaps) and the person receiving the recommendation As the other question implies, there is no easy way of specifying that; but for the purpose of identification you could use recipient





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