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balti
What is the difference between 'for' and 'because of'?
Examples
He's remembered (for/because of) his novels
She did 15 years in prison (for/because of) murder
I didn't say anything (for/because of) fear of offending him
I think they are interchangeable but is there any especific rule i should know about how to know when to use them?
19 déc. 2020 09:58
Réponses · 3
1
There is a way to use either "for" or "because of" in those examples, but they aren't quite interchangeable. I think this is subtle, but in the second two sentences, using "because of" requires changing sentence structure.
The use of the word "for" in each of those cases is vague. It leaves room for the reader to infer the details. Why are they in prison for murder? Well, I assume they committed it. "His novels" could refer to the novels he owned, but I instead infer he wrote them.
When you use "because of", the reader will expect those details in the sentence. So here is how I would write them:
She did 15 years in prison because she committed murder.
I didn't say anything because I feared offending them.
Saying "she did 15 years in prison because of murder" reads to me as "murder exists, therefore she's in prison". That's not quite right, so I added the word committed to be clear.
Did that help any? I feel this is a subtle difference that involves on reader expectations.
19 décembre 2020
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balti
Compétences linguistiques
Anglais, Espagnol
Langue étudiée
Anglais, Espagnol
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