Has Entered Into Agreement

Prepositions have the ability to engage in verbs and turn them into prepositional verbs (or “two words”), even though it seems that verbs work well without preposition. It`s something my daughter and I have notes on. Some examples that have been careful: so I`m leaving. But I invite you, dear reader, to vote in the poll below. Tom`s concern is that it would be useless to follow with “in,” because entering means “getting into that.” But the best thing is not to be too literal when dealing with verbs with two words. Think, for example, of emerging, which means “to arrive unexpectedly,” as in “He came to my house on Tuesday morning.” I challenge you to come to this meaning by combining the respective meanings of filming and lifting. I therefore understand the idea that the conclusion of a contract might be superfluous. But English is full of legitimate two-word verbs. (Click here for the value of an entire dictionary.) And it would never have crossed my mind to say, “Acme and Widgetco have a merger agreement.” Based on MSCD, I send sime that you will say that the parties conclude an agreement rather than simply enter. (see z.B. MSCD 2.21 and 8.18.) Previous use is certainly common and, just as safe, redundant. Why don`t you come in? I could be united from popular use, but Google offered me 143,000 results for “a contract” and 1,260,000 results for “concluded in a contract”.

Clean your room! ” cried Susan`s mother. Take it easy. We`ll go back to sunset,” Sergeant Jennings said. In each of these examples, the Up is foreign to varying degrees. Right now, my favorite red-talking preposition is the on to hat on, as in “Stop Hating on NAFTA.”