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Hello native English speakers. Query about four sentences with the same meaning. 1. The experts have for months been puzzled by the question "how to effectively implement advanced technological solutions in a traditional manufacturing environment to enhance productivity and quality control." 2. The experts have been puzzled for months by the question as how to effectively implement advanced technological solutions in a traditional manufacturing environment to enhance productivity and quality control. 3. The experts have been puzzled for months by the question of how to effectively implement advanced technological solutions in a traditional manufacturing environment to enhance productivity and quality control. 4. The experts have been puzzled for months by the question about how to effectively implement advanced technological solutions in a traditional manufacturing environment to enhance productivity and quality control. Query: Which is/are grammatically correct? which is better or best?
29 de oct. de 2024 15:20
Respuestas · 5
Let's go through each sentence to determine correctness and clarity. "The experts have for months been puzzled by the question 'how to effectively implement advanced technological solutions in a traditional manufacturing environment to enhance productivity and quality control.'" Correct and natural-sounding. The structure is smooth, and using "for months" early on sounds clear and concise. Rating: Very good; it places emphasis on "for months" and reads well. "The experts have been puzzled for months by the question as how to effectively implement advanced technological solutions in a traditional manufacturing environment to enhance productivity and quality control." Incorrect due to "as how." The phrase "as how" is not standard English. Replacing it with "of how" or "about how" would correct it. Rating: Not recommended as written. "The experts have been puzzled for months by the question of how to effectively implement advanced technological solutions in a traditional manufacturing environment to enhance productivity and quality control." Correct and natural-sounding. "The question of how" is a standard phrase and sounds clear and professional. Rating: Excellent; this is one of the best options. "The experts have been puzzled for months by the question about how to effectively implement advanced technological solutions in a traditional manufacturing environment to enhance productivity and quality control." Correct but slightly less natural than option 3. "The question about how" is grammatically fine but less common than "the question of how." Rating: Good, but less preferred than option 3. Summary: Best Option: Sentence 3 is the best choice in terms of grammatical correctness and natural usage. Alternative: Sentence 1 is also a good option if you want to emphasize "for months" early in the sentence. To Avoid: Sentences 2 and 4, with sentence 2 needing correction for "as how."
30 de oct. de 2024 2:41
"the question how to implement..." No extra quotation marks are needed unless you write down an actual question starting with a capital letter and ending with a question mark: ...the question "How can we effectively implement...?"
29 de oct. de 2024 18:29
Phrase 3 is perfect. Phrase 1: it's debatable whether or not this phrase is grammatically valid. I will say it's technically valid, but has poor grammar nonetheless. Phrase 2 is the only one that's undeniably wrong grammar, but it can be fixed by changing "as" into "as to", or into "of" as in phrase 3. Phrase 4 can be grammatically be fine, but has a different meaning - it bakes the question "which question about it?". For this reason, if what you intend to say is equal to phrase 3, then phrase 4 is saying the wrong thing, so it becomes even worse than phrase 2 which has mistaken grammar but is still easily & accurately understood. ps. I wrote this without reading what anyone else said. I'm pleased to see Jonathan put them in the same order, and has pretty much the same explanation as me for phrase 4 being last.
29 de oct. de 2024 18:24
3 is the only one that isn't clumsily worded. 1 has the compound adverb phrase awkwardly placed between the auxiliary verb and the main verb; and it also promises a question, but doesn't actually ask one. 2 is a completely invalid construction. "The question as how to..." simply doesn't collocate well. 4 could be okay grammatically, but only if it referred to one specific question that had previously been asked. From the context, that doesn't seem to be the case.
29 de oct. de 2024 17:42
Hi ican help
29 de oct. de 2024 17:13
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