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  • cause, cos, because | WordReference Forums
    For example, native New Yorkers do not pronounce 'cause as anything that could reasonably be transcribed as "cos", and so this would not make any sense if you were transcribing a New York accent On the other hand, 'cos is a fair approximation of the way the abbreviated word would be said by speakers with other accents
  • Cause y Because - WordReference Forums
    Con el apóstrofo delante entiendo que 'cause = cuz = because (porque), y no el sustantivo cause (causa) Hablado queda claro: bɪˈ kɒz = 'CAUSE, CUZ kɔːz = CAUSE (CAUSA) En conversación con frecuencia se salta la primera sílaba de "because", al igual que se acortan otras palabras Ej : 'Fraid so = I'm afraid so (Me temo que sí )
  • Is cause instead of because becoming Standard English?
    Nowadays, I'm seeing a drastic increase in usage of cause in place of because, especially in written English People are in such a hurry, that a statement like below passes off like Standard English: It rains cause clouds form in the sky, and that happens cause of water vapor, and vapor forms cause of trees and forests
  • en raison de à cause de pour cause de grâce à
    À cause de Du fait de On la croyait moins vieille, à cause de ses cheveux bruns (FLAUBERT, Trois contes Un Cœur simple, 1877, p 64) On ne pouvait laisser les fenêtres ouvertes, à cause du bruit Pour cause de (+ subst de l'inanimé sans article, désignant le plus souvent des événements ou des phénomènes fréquents) En raison de
  • être dû à à cause de | WordReference Forums
    Bonjour chloéChung et bienvenue sur le forum ! La bonne réponse est "dû à" Pour ce qui est de la différence entre "à la suite de" et "à cause de", la première expression signifie qu'il y a succession dans le temps des deux actions, avec ou sans relation de causalité, alors que dans la deuxième il y a une relation de causalité (principale même)
  • result in cause lead to - WordReference Forums
    This negative nuance also applies to the noun cause – specifically in its meaning of what brought something about, what made it happen in the first place But in its sense of a reason or good excuse for something, the noun clause can be either negative or positive (there’s no cause for alarm this is a cause for celebration we have cause
  • Cause vs Causes - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    It isn't the software or the workbooks that cause the increase in price, it's the fact of their inclusion in the packages that causes it So, when determining the entity that "which" connects back to, you should see that invisible word "fact" as replacing everything in the first part of the sentence, and then you can see that it must be singular
  • Cause for vs cause of - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    "Cause for" seems to mean "a valid reason for", as in "cause for alarm" "Cause of" implies a causal relationship, as in "this is the cause of that" I personally can't think of many contexts where "cause for" would be appropriate other that "cause for alarm" and phrases similar to it




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