“ to” or “ for”? in this sentence?












0














i have a doubt whether to use 'to' or 'for' in the following sentence-




You don't seem equal _____ the task




either- 'to' or 'for' should be the answer.



I have saw books mentioning both "to" & "for". Also, my colleagues have mixed responses on this.










share|improve this question









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  • I'm flagging this as off-topic ("no research/ELL"), since a quick dictionary check would reveal the correct usage. Hi Justauser, you may not be aware that our other site English Language Learners is the best place to look for answers on English questions that a fluent speaker would find trivial. If you have a question for ELL, be sure to read their guidance on what you can ask. :-)
    – Chappo
    2 days ago
















0














i have a doubt whether to use 'to' or 'for' in the following sentence-




You don't seem equal _____ the task




either- 'to' or 'for' should be the answer.



I have saw books mentioning both "to" & "for". Also, my colleagues have mixed responses on this.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Justauser is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • I'm flagging this as off-topic ("no research/ELL"), since a quick dictionary check would reveal the correct usage. Hi Justauser, you may not be aware that our other site English Language Learners is the best place to look for answers on English questions that a fluent speaker would find trivial. If you have a question for ELL, be sure to read their guidance on what you can ask. :-)
    – Chappo
    2 days ago














0












0








0







i have a doubt whether to use 'to' or 'for' in the following sentence-




You don't seem equal _____ the task




either- 'to' or 'for' should be the answer.



I have saw books mentioning both "to" & "for". Also, my colleagues have mixed responses on this.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Justauser is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











i have a doubt whether to use 'to' or 'for' in the following sentence-




You don't seem equal _____ the task




either- 'to' or 'for' should be the answer.



I have saw books mentioning both "to" & "for". Also, my colleagues have mixed responses on this.







grammar word-choice prepositions






share|improve this question









New contributor




Justauser is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









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share|improve this question








edited 2 days ago









sumelic

45.9k8108211




45.9k8108211






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asked 2 days ago









Justauser

1




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  • I'm flagging this as off-topic ("no research/ELL"), since a quick dictionary check would reveal the correct usage. Hi Justauser, you may not be aware that our other site English Language Learners is the best place to look for answers on English questions that a fluent speaker would find trivial. If you have a question for ELL, be sure to read their guidance on what you can ask. :-)
    – Chappo
    2 days ago


















  • I'm flagging this as off-topic ("no research/ELL"), since a quick dictionary check would reveal the correct usage. Hi Justauser, you may not be aware that our other site English Language Learners is the best place to look for answers on English questions that a fluent speaker would find trivial. If you have a question for ELL, be sure to read their guidance on what you can ask. :-)
    – Chappo
    2 days ago
















I'm flagging this as off-topic ("no research/ELL"), since a quick dictionary check would reveal the correct usage. Hi Justauser, you may not be aware that our other site English Language Learners is the best place to look for answers on English questions that a fluent speaker would find trivial. If you have a question for ELL, be sure to read their guidance on what you can ask. :-)
– Chappo
2 days ago




I'm flagging this as off-topic ("no research/ELL"), since a quick dictionary check would reveal the correct usage. Hi Justauser, you may not be aware that our other site English Language Learners is the best place to look for answers on English questions that a fluent speaker would find trivial. If you have a question for ELL, be sure to read their guidance on what you can ask. :-)
– Chappo
2 days ago










2 Answers
2






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0














The idiom is to be equal to the task, so the answer is "to".






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MihaelaP is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • okay, but i have saw books mentioning both "to" & "for" also my colleagues have mixed responses on this, i am still confused about the above, but great @MihaelaP for your quick response
    – Justauser
    2 days ago












  • Hi Mihaela, welcome to EL&U. This isn't a bad start, but it's too short: the system has flagged it as "low-quality because of its length and content." An answer on EL&U is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct. Can I suggest you edit your answer to provide more information - e.g., add a published definition of the idiom. For further guidance, see How to Answer. :-)
    – Chappo
    2 days ago



















0














The phrase "equal to the task" (which is the correct expression) is a special idiom with its roots in mathematics. Two plus two equals four. The sum of two and two is equal to four. Both sentences are correct.



To tell someone that he or she is not equal to the task is to tell them they do not possess the "two plus two"--the ability--to equal four--the desired result (i.e., the successful completion of the task).



Less idiomatic ways of saying pretty much the same thing include the following examples:




You don't seem sufficiently competent for the task.




Or,




You abilities are not sufficient for the task.




Or,




For this task, you are not competent [or prepared, or ready, or suitable, or suited].







share|improve this answer





















  • you got the exact sentence, the second one is the correct answer and we have to do corrections in our work, btw i am in a non-english speaking country and thats why we were all confused.
    – Justauser
    57 mins ago











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2 Answers
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active

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active

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active

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0














The idiom is to be equal to the task, so the answer is "to".






share|improve this answer








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MihaelaP is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • okay, but i have saw books mentioning both "to" & "for" also my colleagues have mixed responses on this, i am still confused about the above, but great @MihaelaP for your quick response
    – Justauser
    2 days ago












  • Hi Mihaela, welcome to EL&U. This isn't a bad start, but it's too short: the system has flagged it as "low-quality because of its length and content." An answer on EL&U is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct. Can I suggest you edit your answer to provide more information - e.g., add a published definition of the idiom. For further guidance, see How to Answer. :-)
    – Chappo
    2 days ago
















0














The idiom is to be equal to the task, so the answer is "to".






share|improve this answer








New contributor




MihaelaP is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.


















  • okay, but i have saw books mentioning both "to" & "for" also my colleagues have mixed responses on this, i am still confused about the above, but great @MihaelaP for your quick response
    – Justauser
    2 days ago












  • Hi Mihaela, welcome to EL&U. This isn't a bad start, but it's too short: the system has flagged it as "low-quality because of its length and content." An answer on EL&U is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct. Can I suggest you edit your answer to provide more information - e.g., add a published definition of the idiom. For further guidance, see How to Answer. :-)
    – Chappo
    2 days ago














0












0








0






The idiom is to be equal to the task, so the answer is "to".






share|improve this answer








New contributor




MihaelaP is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









The idiom is to be equal to the task, so the answer is "to".







share|improve this answer








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MihaelaP is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer






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answered 2 days ago









MihaelaP

314




314




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  • okay, but i have saw books mentioning both "to" & "for" also my colleagues have mixed responses on this, i am still confused about the above, but great @MihaelaP for your quick response
    – Justauser
    2 days ago












  • Hi Mihaela, welcome to EL&U. This isn't a bad start, but it's too short: the system has flagged it as "low-quality because of its length and content." An answer on EL&U is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct. Can I suggest you edit your answer to provide more information - e.g., add a published definition of the idiom. For further guidance, see How to Answer. :-)
    – Chappo
    2 days ago


















  • okay, but i have saw books mentioning both "to" & "for" also my colleagues have mixed responses on this, i am still confused about the above, but great @MihaelaP for your quick response
    – Justauser
    2 days ago












  • Hi Mihaela, welcome to EL&U. This isn't a bad start, but it's too short: the system has flagged it as "low-quality because of its length and content." An answer on EL&U is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct. Can I suggest you edit your answer to provide more information - e.g., add a published definition of the idiom. For further guidance, see How to Answer. :-)
    – Chappo
    2 days ago
















okay, but i have saw books mentioning both "to" & "for" also my colleagues have mixed responses on this, i am still confused about the above, but great @MihaelaP for your quick response
– Justauser
2 days ago






okay, but i have saw books mentioning both "to" & "for" also my colleagues have mixed responses on this, i am still confused about the above, but great @MihaelaP for your quick response
– Justauser
2 days ago














Hi Mihaela, welcome to EL&U. This isn't a bad start, but it's too short: the system has flagged it as "low-quality because of its length and content." An answer on EL&U is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct. Can I suggest you edit your answer to provide more information - e.g., add a published definition of the idiom. For further guidance, see How to Answer. :-)
– Chappo
2 days ago




Hi Mihaela, welcome to EL&U. This isn't a bad start, but it's too short: the system has flagged it as "low-quality because of its length and content." An answer on EL&U is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct. Can I suggest you edit your answer to provide more information - e.g., add a published definition of the idiom. For further guidance, see How to Answer. :-)
– Chappo
2 days ago













0














The phrase "equal to the task" (which is the correct expression) is a special idiom with its roots in mathematics. Two plus two equals four. The sum of two and two is equal to four. Both sentences are correct.



To tell someone that he or she is not equal to the task is to tell them they do not possess the "two plus two"--the ability--to equal four--the desired result (i.e., the successful completion of the task).



Less idiomatic ways of saying pretty much the same thing include the following examples:




You don't seem sufficiently competent for the task.




Or,




You abilities are not sufficient for the task.




Or,




For this task, you are not competent [or prepared, or ready, or suitable, or suited].







share|improve this answer





















  • you got the exact sentence, the second one is the correct answer and we have to do corrections in our work, btw i am in a non-english speaking country and thats why we were all confused.
    – Justauser
    57 mins ago
















0














The phrase "equal to the task" (which is the correct expression) is a special idiom with its roots in mathematics. Two plus two equals four. The sum of two and two is equal to four. Both sentences are correct.



To tell someone that he or she is not equal to the task is to tell them they do not possess the "two plus two"--the ability--to equal four--the desired result (i.e., the successful completion of the task).



Less idiomatic ways of saying pretty much the same thing include the following examples:




You don't seem sufficiently competent for the task.




Or,




You abilities are not sufficient for the task.




Or,




For this task, you are not competent [or prepared, or ready, or suitable, or suited].







share|improve this answer





















  • you got the exact sentence, the second one is the correct answer and we have to do corrections in our work, btw i am in a non-english speaking country and thats why we were all confused.
    – Justauser
    57 mins ago














0












0








0






The phrase "equal to the task" (which is the correct expression) is a special idiom with its roots in mathematics. Two plus two equals four. The sum of two and two is equal to four. Both sentences are correct.



To tell someone that he or she is not equal to the task is to tell them they do not possess the "two plus two"--the ability--to equal four--the desired result (i.e., the successful completion of the task).



Less idiomatic ways of saying pretty much the same thing include the following examples:




You don't seem sufficiently competent for the task.




Or,




You abilities are not sufficient for the task.




Or,




For this task, you are not competent [or prepared, or ready, or suitable, or suited].







share|improve this answer












The phrase "equal to the task" (which is the correct expression) is a special idiom with its roots in mathematics. Two plus two equals four. The sum of two and two is equal to four. Both sentences are correct.



To tell someone that he or she is not equal to the task is to tell them they do not possess the "two plus two"--the ability--to equal four--the desired result (i.e., the successful completion of the task).



Less idiomatic ways of saying pretty much the same thing include the following examples:




You don't seem sufficiently competent for the task.




Or,




You abilities are not sufficient for the task.




Or,




For this task, you are not competent [or prepared, or ready, or suitable, or suited].








share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 2 days ago









rhetorician

16.1k12052




16.1k12052












  • you got the exact sentence, the second one is the correct answer and we have to do corrections in our work, btw i am in a non-english speaking country and thats why we were all confused.
    – Justauser
    57 mins ago


















  • you got the exact sentence, the second one is the correct answer and we have to do corrections in our work, btw i am in a non-english speaking country and thats why we were all confused.
    – Justauser
    57 mins ago
















you got the exact sentence, the second one is the correct answer and we have to do corrections in our work, btw i am in a non-english speaking country and thats why we were all confused.
– Justauser
57 mins ago




you got the exact sentence, the second one is the correct answer and we have to do corrections in our work, btw i am in a non-english speaking country and thats why we were all confused.
– Justauser
57 mins ago










Justauser is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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