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- concern, the concern, or concerns? Any difference in meaning?
To express a concern or express concerns is using the word in its countable noun sense, which refers to one or more specific concerns - a concern being particular element or thing to be concerned about So you might say: I have one or two concerns with this proposal
- “concern of ”or “concern about” - English Language Learners . . .
I want to say I'm worrying about something Which one should I use,either “concern of something” or “concern about something”? Thanks for your answering
- singular vs plural - there are concerns that VS there is concern . . .
However, there are concerns that they[certain drugs] could pose a serious health risk to humans However, there is concern that they[certain drugs] could pose a serious health risk to humans H
- ‘Concern of’ vs. ‘concern about’ - English Language Learners . . .
Commercial builders downplayed ______ a bust in the superheated housing market 1) The concern of 2) Concerns about The answer is number 2, but why does number 1 not work?
- Dear Concern or Concerned - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
It is un common for anybody in my country to begin emails with "Dear anything ", but "Dear concern" or "Dear concerned" would be extremely odd I agree that "Dear concern" makes no sense at all - it appears to be addressed to a concern (i e a worry) But the rules of etiquette often make no sense: traditionally business letters started "Dear sir", but if you met somebody for the first time
- Article before concerns - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
The concerns about commercial advertising had still not been addressed successfully Why the first sentence has no 'the' before 'concerns', while the second has?
- sentence construction - concerns about something raised vs concerns . . .
They are free of the concerns raised about impurities and odor by many fish oil brands I googled "concerns raised about", and it's been used and seems correct So is the original sentence correct? sentence-construction Share Improve this question Follow asked Feb 11, 2021 at 21:05 Nima Abna 16918 Add a comment 1 Answer Sorted by:
- subject verb agreement - If there is any vs If there are any . . .
8 Should I use "if there is any" or "if there are any" in the following sentences? Are they all correct? Can I ever use if there is any with singular countable nouns?
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