Provide information on, of or about something? Normally you'd say "important information" or "urgent information", but the of form is a well-accepted formal phrasing You might try to use it to indicate owner of the information, but that's really awkward "The disk contains information of Sony on their newest mp3 player" - but I don't think you'd ever encounter it in real life
All this information - English Language Learners Stack Exchange All this information is correct The sentence is absolutely correct The word "all" has been used as a predeterminer before the determiner "this" followed by an uncountable noun "information" The pattern predeterminer + determiner + countable uncountable noun is grammatically correct
What are other phrases for full of information? I'm thinking of the following: info-packed information-packed knowledge-packed I guess these are grammatically acceptable but probably there are better choices
word choice - For your reference or For your information - English . . . For your information (frequently abbreviated FYI) For your situational awareness (not as common, may be abbreviated FYSA) For reference For future reference For your information in the workplace implies that no action is required on the recipient’s part—commonly used in unsolicited communication