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raise questions to/with sb raise questions to/with sb in this sentence, which preposition should be used? I read this sentence on an article by a famous columnist, of whom in fact I am a great disciple, and he said that prep with should be used,but he did not give any explanation. In my opinion, "lodge complaints with sb" could be a good piece of evidence, and I have consulted oxford longman cambridge collins macmillan and chambers, but they were just not able to tell me. |
Re: raise questions to/with sb Was he American or British or another nationality ? There is often a difference in the frequency of the use of "to" and "with" in BrEng and AmEng (and undoubtedly other varieties) when it comes to expressing the concept of saying something to someone. So, for example , after the verb "talk". I checked with a concordancer, and a search of an AmEng corpus brought up examples of both, while a search of a BrEng corpus gave examples only of "talked to". So : BrEng - I talked to my husband about it AmEng - I talked to/with my husband about it That doesn't mean that no British person would ever say "talked with", but "talked to " is certainly the norm. I found no examples of "raise a question" on the concordancer, but plenty on Google. And it was clear that both varieties of English may use both prepositions. This one was from a BrEng site : Mr Chisholm agreed to raise a question with Cabinet secretary Fiona Hyslop ... and this on an AmEng site : Any number above 10 % might raise a question with the rating agencies. This one was BrEng : To raise a question to Ofsted, FIRST login and go to And this one AmEng : every member is free to raise a question to the entire group at any time What is not possible to decide by looking at Google is the relative rate of frequency between the two varieties. It may be that both prepositions are alternatives in both varieties and are equally used. But it may be that one is more frequent in BrEng and the other in AmEng. And the nationality of your source may be pushing him to prefer "with". However, notice that he is giving an old-fashioned "prescriptive" rule. He has "decided" that one is better, rather than looking at what people actually say and giving a descriptive rule. This (ie prescription) is the origin of ridiculous rules like the one that a preposition should never end a sentence - which, as George Bernard Shaw said, is a rule "up with which I cannot put". |
Re: raise questions to/with sb DOUBTS vanished. Thank you. |
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