Search from various English teachers...
Chiemi
which is correct? make an effort on doing/ make an effort to do
which grammar is correct?
ex)
1.He made an effort on being a good boy.
2.He made an effort to be a good boy.
are the sentences correct?
ex)
1.She made a great effort on studying.
2.She made a great effort on passing the test.
please explain what is wrong(if it's wrong)I've heard this expression, 'I made a great effort on it.'
is it also wrong?
Mar 15, 2016 11:04 PM
Answers · 4
2
Ok. I don't think the verb "make (something something)...." is ever really used much with "on..." or "on being (something)...". Probably never. The closest I can think of is "make a bet on"... but that sounds wrong too. That would be phrased "put a bet on (that horse)" or "made a bet that (something would happen)". I'm pretty sure "make....on" is categorically wrong.
I'll give you some additional examples of how to rephrase or even combine the two "She made... effort..." phrases:
"She made a great effort to (study/pass the test)"
"She put in great effort studying (to pass the test)"
"She put great effort into studying to (pass the test)"
I think you can even say "She made a great effort studying (to pass the test)" with no "to" after "effort".
All of these "to" can be thought of as short for "in order to". You could even use "...effort towards..." such as in this example:
"She put great effort towards studying in order to pass the test"
Using "on" doesn't really make sense. You can write a paper on a topic, you can work on a project or goal as in:
"He /worked hard/ on being a good boy."
but effort is something you make in order to do something, or put into/towards some goal.
March 15, 2016
1
1.He made an effort on being a good boy.
2.He made an effort to be a good boy.
#2 - He made an effort to be a good boy - is correct.
1.She made a great effort on studying -- should be written as "She made a great effort to study".
2.She made a great effort on passing the test. -- should be written as "She made a great effort to pass the test".
March 15, 2016
Still haven’t found your answers?
Write down your questions and let the native speakers help you!
Chiemi
Language Skills
English, Japanese, Spanish
Learning Language
English, Spanish
Articles You May Also Like

Same Word, Different Meaning: American, British, and South African English
12 likes · 11 Comments

How to Sound Confident in English (Even When You’re Nervous)
13 likes · 11 Comments

Marketing Vocabulary and Phrases for Business English Learners
10 likes · 6 Comments
More articles