安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- whats the difference between participate and participate in?
I disagree that there is no difference A person is said to participate in an event You would only use 'participate' on its own if you have already referred to the event, e g 'There will be a competition next month, in which local schoolchildren will participate' Presumably your first sentence follows a mention of the event being described
- word choice - Participate in or participate on? - English Language . . .
Participate in sounds better with a noun following it than a gerund or verb – Kris Commented Jan 11
- differences - Participate at vs Participate in - English Language . . .
Participate is not tied to a particular preposition such as at or in Like other verbs, it can be modified by a phrase beginning with a preposition The choice of preposition will depend more on what commonly goes with the rest of the prepositional phrase, not on the verb Some examples: Everyone will participate in the weekly meeting
- participating lt;in, on gt; the conference. | WordReference Forums
The Board is a body, therefore we can't "participate" in it The Conference is (in certain circumstances) a happening, therefore we can participate in it Setwale Charm is right The verb preposition is "participate in"
- participate to, in or at a congress? | WordReference Forums
Participate at therefore reduces the (in this case) congress to a place, and thus would include people who waited on tables, cleaned the place, organised the event, etc , without actually taking part in the purpose of the congress as such
- participate to, in or at? - WordReference Forums
As a summary on participate (and participation as well), could a native speaker (or a skilled person) confirm which ones of the following sentences are correct? Thanks in advance Pascal _____ - Mr X participated at a technical meeting - Mr X participated at a technical meeting at my office
- participate to participate in | WordReference Forums
Note that "participer dans", which is the reverse equivalent of "participate to" in French and a frequent mistake of native English speakers, yields 654 000 results in Google, not all of them wrong, but certainly misleading (and I should think that 654 000 hits in French is proportionally more than 1 5 million hits in English)
- participate vs attend | WordReference Forums
You attend a meeting, you participate in a discussion Broadly speaking, I think this pretty much describes the difference As usual, you should have a sentence to translate, and a context - it's in the Rules which you should have read, and it's in the Rules for a reason "
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