Stefano
to provide VS to provide with Hi, I've happened to read both these different structures of the verb "to provide" in texts, papers and articles. My question is: To provide SOMETHING to SOMEONE (My parents provided a car both to me and my sister) To provide SOMEONE with SOMETHING (My friends provided me with the money I needed to buy a new car) Do they have exactly the same meaning, so as you can use either one or the other? Is it just a "word order difference" to set the sentence, but they have the same meaning? Thank you!
Sep 7, 2015 10:15 AM
Answers · 1
Yes, they're the same. "Provided with" is a little more common.
September 7, 2015
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