Special & dedicated to
Hi, A dictionary says that "dedicated" has the meaning of "Designed for a particular use or function:", so I wonder whether the word can be used this way: Remit the funds to the
Hi, A dictionary says that "dedicated" has the meaning of "Designed for a particular use or function:", so I wonder whether the word can be used this way: Remit the funds to the
My wife is a dedicated/devoted mother. I presume both dedicated and devoted fit here, but I could never tell the different meanings between them. Are they really different?
Dedicated to maintain can be interpreted as a contraction of dedicated in order to maintain, while dedicated to maintaining has only one interpretation.
Dedicated has shrugged off a lot of this, in many contexts, and is comfortably used with reference to something that is set aside or reserved for a particular purpose. It is
Have you seen dedicated for actually in use somewhere? I cannot think of a case where it is used. Dedicated to is the correct pairing.
I am dedicated to +Ving As I know this is the correct form. " I am dedicated to taking care of him." But google shows more results with this form "dedicated to take care"
The former was more common, but only by about a margin of 3 to 2. ("Dedicated to preserve," on the other hand, was definitely a minority choice, cited 40 times less than
Hey all, is there any difference between the meaning of these two sentences: 1. ASUS has been dedicated on research and development 2.ASUS has been dedicated to
Is "dedicated" a good match with "public use"? As in: "This room has been dedicated by the hospital to public use." It sounds a bit stilted to me. I''d expect something
Hi, According to one of the dictionaries I own, "dedicated to" cannot be followed by the original form of a verb; it must be followed by a noun, pronoun, or gerund, because "to"
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