![](/rp/kFAqShRrnkQMbH6NYLBYoJ3lq9s.png)
be associated with & be related to | WordReference Forums
2012年7月30日 · 'associated with' means that there is an indirect relationship between two things: "Korea is associated with heavy industry" (but so is Japan, Germany, The USA, etc.) 'associated with' is vaguer than related to.
associated with vs associating with | WordReference Forums
2013年1月4日 · 'Associated with' is generally used of things, particularly in scientific writing: 'Erysipelas is associated with discoloration of the skin.' ('is found together with') Last edited: Jan 4, 2013
"associated with" vs "associated to" - WordReference Forums
2009年1月22日 · My question is whether or not the preposition to can be used with the adjective associated. Context:
I have associated or I have been associated - WordReference Forums
2011年9月23日 · I have been associated with the company(ABC) for over 3 years. It it's a passive structure, What is Agent ...
associated with vs. correspond to | WordReference Forums
2018年2月8日 · I'm trying to use correspond to instead of associated with.. is it correct.. thanks in advance. This can be attributed to the fact that the noise variance sigma is spread over four and two matched filters at the receiver in our proposed transceivers associated with 4-CT and 2 …
In what capacity have you known the applicant
2008年1月29日 · A friend of mine who was hunting a job asked me to be one of her references. So recently, I got this reference form from one of the companies she interviewed. There is this blank "In what capacity have you known the applicant" which I don't quite understand what to put in. Does it refer to...
Can you call an associate professor "Prof. X" - WordReference …
2014年7月26日 · Let's say Steven Brown is the associate professor of ABC university (US system). Can I call him Prof. Brown (face-to-face in a lecture hall)? Is it appropriate to call him Prof. Brown on a written document (on newspaper)? Is this the same case as in "Assistant Professor" (US system)?
affiliated - to or with? | WordReference Forums
2005年4月26日 · context is a company that is a member of a pension plan and has signed the corresponding "affiliation agreement" Is the company affiliated to or with the pension plan? I suspect both are OK, but is there a diiference in meaning? or is one British usage and the other American? thxs
difference between "EA" and "unit" - WordReference Forums
2014年4月30日 · I know that both "EA" and "unit" indicate the number of products. Is there any difference between these two words?
"Risk of" or "risk for"? - WordReference Forums
2014年7月7日 · Of = [that is] associated with; [that is] possessed by. Of is not part of the "risk" construction, it is part of of acute lymphoid leukemia - an adjectival phrase. The following are both modifiers comprised of [preposition + substantive] at ~ of Journalists in the zone are at risk of being kidnapped. -> at risk = adjectival phrase.