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Are "rates" and "a cost" interchangeable in this sentence? They typically charge for their services, though often at rates cheaper than those the consumer would pay to a private sector procedure. If so, how the above sentence becomes different?
Jul 6, 2014 5:08 AM
Answers · 2
4
Just expanding a little on Jesse´s excellent answer: Rates often (but not always) refer to longer term contracts (reoccurring payments) whereas costs often (but again, not always) refer to a single, fixed cost.
July 6, 2014
3
Rates is plural, so if you use the word "rates", then that might give the idea that there is more than one rate that this company charges. A cost is singular, and that would be referring to one specific prices that this company would charge its services at. So, it just depends on what sort of rate/cost this company is charging. Are there multiple prices that these services come at or is there one specific cost that these services are charged at.
July 6, 2014
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