- Dedicated on or to - WordReference Forums
"Dedicated" is usually an adjective, so using "has been dedicated" (rather than "is dedicated") implies it is no longer dedicated, which really requires some explanation within the sentence In the article, I think the speaker meant "dedicate" as a verb, but this is not an idiomatic use here
- 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 - WordReference Forums
However, as a parent of a 3-year-old, I can't help but notice that a number of children's books feature the "for" dedication (without the word "dedicated"), such as: "For my niece, Elizabeth " This makes it sounds as if the book was meant as a gift rather than a dedication
- dedicated and devoted | WordReference Forums
My wife is dedicated to our children - for your wife, the children have a very special place in her overall desire to care I think that "dedicated mother" is not quite right - I can see "a dedicated doctor" which occupation has a reasonably well defined set of boundaries, but a mother goes beyond this, as it is unrestricted
- I am dedicated to +Ving - WordReference Forums
about 913,000 for " dedicated to take care about 19,100 for " dedicated to taking care or another search: about 1,140,000 for " dedicated to kill about 13,700 for " dedicated to killing I just noticed that you googled on UK google Can it be AE BE usage?
- Dedicate my time “for” or “to” - WordReference Forums
Hello everyone! I am confused whether to use “to” or “for” in the following sentence: I dedicate all my time to for my studies
- committed to, dedicated to | WordReference Forums
Just for fun I Googled "committed to providing" and "committed to provide " 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 ")
- dedicated to + gerund or infinitive - WordReference Forums
Dedicated to maintain can be interpreted as a contraction of dedicated in order to maintain, while dedicated to maintaining has only one interpretation E esthertb
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