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17 de ene. de 2019 · In your case, the word focus is a noun. If you are not sure about the usage, always check dictionaries. Check the examples. Cambridge bolds the prepositions that are mandatory to use in almost all words' definitions. Focus as in Cambridge reads: the main or central point of something, especially of attention or interest*
1. One focuses ON something. focus on. Pay particular attention to. ‘the study will focus on a number of areas in Wales’. Focus (Oxford Dictionaries) Share. Improve this answer. answered Aug 24, 2018 at 6:53.
8 de ene. de 2017 · Should I say focus in or focus on. In which situations is better to use one over the other. I need to focus on/in quality issues.
27 de may. de 2016 · As for using "at" I have seen it more with the noun form. Prepositions usage usually doesn't have any special reason. So answering your "why" question is difficult. In general, people just don't say "focus at". So I would say "Don't say focus at, because you'll sound weird." Your question cannot be answered without some examples.
8 de sept. de 2017 · These are all synonymous so there will be many situations where you can use any of them. Your definitions are pretty accurate, but the actual degree of focus can depend on context. For example, you can "pay full attention" to something, meaning you concentrate on it. There are differences in idiomatic use.
21 de dic. de 2014 · In "I want to do sth" the focus is on wish, in "I'm willing to do" the focus is on will/volition. Practically there is only a slight difference in meaning, but one may say the frequency of the two expressions is different. "to want to do" is a common expression whereas "to be willing to do" is not a frequent expression.
As was discussed earlier here, You haven't to do it is not very idiomatic nowadays, but when it was in more common use, mainly in British English it had the sense 'You don't have to do it." You just have to accept that, in English usage, have to always means that something is required or necessary.
13 de jun. de 2017 · Most of the existing work focus on... Most of the existing work focuses on ... Most of the existing studies focus on ... Your ex.1 Is ungrammatical since it requires the 3rd person sing verb, “focuses”. 2 and 3. are okay – these are partitive constructions with the fused-determiner head “most”.
21 de nov. de 2014 · How do you like your coffee? How do you like your coffee? How do you like your coffee? How do you like your coffee? How do you like your coffee? Even context-free, emphasis on the words in bold (or any combination of words in this sentence) affects the meaning. See Wikipedia: Focus (linguistics) for a more technical description of contrastive ...
12 de nov. de 2018 · We should focus/be focusing on the topic: your life. Does this sentence change if the pick one .