English Language & Usage Asked by wiso on April 5, 2021
What is the correct preposition to use after improvement? For example,
The successful candidate is expected to contribute with an improvement
of the current calibration.
As a native speaker of American English, the sentences that sound correct to me are as follows, and in the order in which I would expect them:
The successful candidate is expected to contribute with an improvement to the invention
The successful candidate is expected to contribute with an improvement in the quality of life
The successful candidate is expected to contribute with an improvement of quality of life (less standard sounding to my ear)
The successful candidate is expected to contribute with an improvement *on the status quo.
Correct answer by Affable Geek on April 5, 2021
There has been an improvement in/of Sally's performance in Mathematics from 3.0/4.0 to 3.2/4.0 and she is determined to further improve on/in her skills in this subject.
My choices: improvement in, improve on for the optional positions marked by /.
improve on may mean additions as part of improvement, whereas improve in may mean improvement in efficiency, proficiency etc. without any enhancement in techniques or functionalities.For many people however they mean the same or both interchangeably.
Answered by karthik on April 5, 2021
A thing may be improved, or made better. You can use the word in this sense by saying something along the lines of
The successful candidate is expected to contribute by improving the current calibration.
If you're not actually modifying the calibration and rather submitting an improvement, however, you'll have to use a preposition.
In that case, you "improve upon" something by making or suggesting something better. "Improve on" may be used similarly.
Some people use "improve in" to convey individuals' attainment of skill (e.g. "John improved in playing the violin"), but this isn't correct, since using improve without an object in this way would imply that John himself increased in value or became better (see definition #5 here).
I assume that "John improved at playing the violin" would be correct, but it isn't used commonly (in my part of the US, at least).
"Improve of" and "improve to" are just incorrect -- see the definitions of "of" and "to."
Answered by Centigonal on April 5, 2021
It could be an improvement 'of the current curriculum' an improvement 'in performance' or an improvement 'on previous attempts."
Answered by Joanne on April 5, 2021
The Macmillan Dictionary's definition of improvement highlights this phrase:
an improvement on something : better than something that existed before
Using their recommendation, I would rewrite your phrase this way:
The successful candidate is expected to contribute an improvement on the current calibration method.
Answered by Gnawme on April 5, 2021
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