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Fernando Veloz
What is the difference between "because" and "because of"?
Mar 10, 2016 5:43 AM
Answers · 4
1
They are different parts of speech.
'Because' is a conjunction. It is followed by a phrase containing a subject and a verb. What follows 'because' is a mini-sentence in itself.
The match was cancelled because [it was raining.]
They stayed home because [the weather was bad.]
We left the party because [John was rude to us.]
'Because of' is followed by a noun or noun phrase. This is because 'of' is a preposition.
The match was cancelled because of [the rain]
They stayed home because of [the bad weather]
We left the party because of [John's rudeness].
I hope that helps.
March 10, 2016
1)e.g. I lost my job because you didn't help me. (Because you didn't help me, I lost my job)
2)eg. I lost my job because of you. (Because of you, I lost my job)
March 10, 2016
because + sentence or because of + noun, sentence
March 10, 2016
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Fernando Veloz
Language Skills
English, Spanish
Learning Language
English
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