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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
word usage - English Language Learners Stack Exchange Note that the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines, going back almost 20 years now, discourage this type of usage Checkpoint 13 1 says: Clearly identify the target of each link write "Information about version 4 3" instead of "click here" E g , rather than " Click here to read about link text", use "Have a look at this ELL question, How to refer to link? (open, see, check etc ) "
What is the difference between on and about? [duplicate] The preposition "about" generally denotes some kind of circumscribing That is why you can walk about a place, or talk about something (circumscribing the topic using words) This also explains some idioms like "beat about the bush" (instead of "going straight to the point"; note the variant "beat around the bush") and constructions like "how what about ?" In contrast, the preposition "on
As follows vs as follow - English Language Learners Stack Exchange 'As follows' means 'as described in the passage that follows this' What comes next, usually in the form of a list For example, Mary planned her day as follows: returning all phone calls; a department meeting; lunch with her colleagues; library research This term is always put in the singular (“follows”) even though it applies to numerous items and is frequently followed by a colon It
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
indian english - For your information or for your kind information . . . Information cannot be kind, but it can be given with kindness You can put 'kind' in similar greetings, such as 'kind regards' - the regards you are giving giving are kind in nature When saying For your information, you are giving someone some information to 'keep' with their records, either physical or mental, so to speak