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- dedicated to doing vs. dedicated to do | WordReference Forums
Hi, According to one of the dictionaries I own, "dedicated to" cannot be followed by the original form of a verb; it must be followed by a noun, pronoun, or gerund, because "to" here is not a to-infinitive However, I came across so many sentences using "dedicated to be" and "dedicated to do"
- Difference between dedicated for dedicated to
Have you seen dedicated for actually in use somewhere? I cannot think of a case where it is used Dedicated to is the correct pairing
- dedicated and devoted | WordReference Forums
My wife is a dedicated devoted mother I presume both dedicated and devoted fit here, but I could never tell the different meanings between them Are they really different? Thanks
- dedicate something to for something | WordReference Forums
Is "dedicated" a good match with "public use"? As in: "This room has been dedicated by the hospital to public use " It sounds a bit stilted to me I'd expect something more like: "This room has been provided by the hospital for public use"
- Dedicated on or to - WordReference Forums
Hey all, is there any difference between the meaning of these two sentences: 1 ASUS has been dedicated on research and development 2 ASUS has been dedicated to research and development Normally we use ‘dedicated to’ more correct?
- Dedicated to lt;your gt; work - WordReference Forums
Which one is grammatically correct: (a) You are so dedicated to work (b) You are so dedicated to your work Thanks
- committed to, dedicated to | WordReference Forums
The former was more common, but only by about a margin of 3 to 2 ("Dedicated to preserve," on the other hand, was definitely a minority choice, cited 40 times less than "dedicated to preserving ") So Mazbook is right that there is precedent for "committed to provide," though it still wouldn't be my choice
- to provide vs to providing | WordReference Forums
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Malaysia is committed to providing consular services to Malaysian overseas Can I replace 'providing' with 'provide'? Can someone please explain to me why 'providing' is used instead of 'provide'? Or both are acceptable? Source
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