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difference - Inform about vs Inform of vs Inform on - English . . . In the active voice "Inform on" is strongly associated with the meaning of criminal implication given above However, in the passive it merely indicates an area of coverage For example, "He is well informed on a wide variety of topics " simply indicates a person whose knowledge covers many areas
phrase meaning - When do you say informed from instead of informed . . . Famous American TV host Larry King has died at 87, ARMENPRESS was informed from King's official Twitter page The Embassy was informed from reliable sources that In my Ngram Viewer search for the two phrases "was informed by" and "was informed from" tells that the former is much popular
inform of, come to know something or aware of "To be made aware" is not much different than "to be informed" but it may lend itself to more easily include the idea of an agent imparting information rather than just the receiving of it For example I might say: Susan was informed of the rules Or Susan was made aware of the rules
prepositions - Inform of or Inform about - English Language Learners . . . Walters was not properly informed of the reasons for her arrest It is with great sorrow that I inform you of the death of our director Companies publish annual reports to inform the public about the previous year's activities
grammar - English Language Learners Stack Exchange Inform is a transitive verb employed as "X informed Y of Z", where X is the person telling, Y is the person being told, and Z is the subject of the telling Transforming into the passive voice gives "Y was informed [by X] of Z " X, the informer may be omitted Your examples A and B don't match this pattern
Difference between inform of and inform that One informs of a fact, whereas one informs that a thing is so In terms of the syntax, “to inform of” takes as its complement a noun phrase, whereas “to inform that” takes a clause
grammar - At no time, was I informed - looking for an explanation . . . B At no time was I informed was is an auxiliary verb, not a lexical one In this example, the subject and the auxiliary verb have been inverted Among other uses of subject–auxiliary inversion is the formation of sentences beginning with a negation, as in the following (b) examples from Wikipedia a Sam will relax at no time b