Vind Engels Leerkrachten
Bunch
discourage (someone) from (something) = discourage (someone) for (something)?
I sometimes see native speakers use 'discourage (someone) for doing something'.
From the dictionary examples, I notice "from" only was used, not "for".
I even see an article where 'discourage sb for ~ing sth' was used. And in a video game, too.
https://i.postimg.cc/BZw5kSrM/Dr-Sw-eanheart.jpg
Please confirm this. "for" also is acceptable grammatically? And both have the same meaning?
7 jan. 2020 09:39
Antwoorden · 8
3
I have never heard anyone follow the verb 'discourage' with the preposition 'for'. If you were to write or say 'discourage someone for ...ing' in a grammar exam, this would definitely be marked as incorrect.
The only acceptable collocation is 'discourage from'.
7 januari 2020
1
discourage someone from...✔️
to discourage someone...✔️
discourage someone for ❌
7 januari 2020
1
“Discourage [someone] from [doing something]” is really the only construction that makes sense.
You could technically use “for” instead of “from” if you want to say that you are discouraging someone *because of* what they’ve done, as in you are scolding them for bad behaviour.
7 januari 2020
If you answer, I'd appreciate it if you answered in answer section, not comment section. Thanks in advance. :)
7 januari 2020
Heb je je antwoorden nog steeds niet gevonden?
Schrijf je vragen op en laat de moedertaalsprekers je helpen!
Bunch
Taalvaardigheden
Engels, Koreaans
Taal die wordt geleerd
Engels
Artikelen die je misschien ook leuk vindt

Speak More Fluently with This Simple Technique
23 likes · 2 Opmerkingen

How to Read and Understand a Business Contract in English
19 likes · 3 Opmerkingen

6 Ways italki Can Help You Succeed in Your School Language Classes
15 likes · 8 Opmerkingen
Meer artikelen