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During the first few weeks of class he is asked to participate in a variety of activities, each of which (takes away from) his studey time.
What I want to know is that ,in the parenthesis part, the preposition -from- is right in the sentence. I think that should be removed.

2006-11-21 12:50:19 · 2 answers · asked by lhoon12 1 in Education & Reference Primary & Secondary Education

2 answers

There needs to be something other than just "takes away", because "takes away his study time" would imply each activity took all of it. "Takes away from" is fine. It would also be correct to say "takes away some of", "infringes on", "chips away at", or just "reduces".

2006-11-21 13:40:57 · answer #1 · answered by dmb 5 · 0 0

"From" should remain in the sentence.

Removing the word "from" would change the sentence to indicate removal of all of his study time. These activities only take away part of his study time.

2006-11-21 20:58:00 · answer #2 · answered by Riviera_ 4 · 0 0

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