experience, of, in or with - WordReference Forums For example, "I have a lot of experience in sales and marketing" or "I have experience in teaching " To have experience with something could be either a field or something more specific While you could say, "I have experience with sales and marketing," you could also say, "I have a lot of experience with working with children "
experience of doing in doing - WordReference Forums 'Experience of' is broader and relates to one's exposure to something (a place, activity, emotion, etc) However I feel that (A) is of course correct, but (B) is possibly incorrect (it anyway jars slightly), unless it is meant that living in the country is an art in which he is a novice, rather than just meaning that he has not visited the place?
3-year v. 3 years experience - WordReference Forums The meaning of "experience" is different in your first two sentences A "three-year experience" means that you had an experience that lasted three years For example: "I lived in France in the 1990s It was a wonderful three-year experience" "This position requires three years' experience" means, as you know, work experience
From In my experience-preposition - WordReference Forums From my experience is possible, but not common (at least in BE) For example, if you look at the British National Corpus, you find 19 examples, compared with 194 for in my experience In the US corpus (COCA) there is a similar pattern: 165 from compared with 750 in
An Experience Where When - WordReference Forums I am a little lost Can you please tell me which one is more correct: 1 Most people had an early experience where their needs were ignored 2 Most people had an early experience when their needs were ignored 3 Most people had an early experience of having their needs ignored Many thanks!
have experience in of with - WordReference Forums Cambridge doesn't give an example of 'experience with', but it does give one for 'experience in': experience in sth Their experience in marketing and promotion has brought excellent results Which is pretty similar to Oxford's example: I had some experience in fashion design
Im telling you this by from experience. - WordReference Forums Hi :) ,, When advising a friend (ex- relationship , girls etc :D), " I have lots of experience about this subject , The same thing has happened to me once , They can not be trusted, I'm telling you this by from experience " which would be the correct one from experience Or by
experience + that-clause | WordReference Forums >No one can experience the fact that others can be deceived; they can only understand that it can happen I see My point here is whether "experience + that-clause" can be used in some contexts Is the sentence below logical? "I want you to experience for yourself that you can be deceived during your life "
experience to vs in - WordReference Forums Is it grammatically incorrect to use "to" after "experience"? I have prior experience to deal with various challenges I have prior experience in dealing with various challenges I do often hear people saying the first one
difference between inexperienced and unexperienced? Catastrophic knowledge of severe trauma is unexperienced experience that paradoxically stands for an indescribable core of an event that undermines self-in-relation and the concomitant capacities for language, narrative, and knowledge But Googling also will lead you to people who think that there is no such thing as an ''unexperienced