English Language & Usage Asked on July 15, 2021
I want to say that something will happen regardless of whether something else happens. However, in my particular situation, using regardless of sounds awkward.
Some arrangements work better than others, regardless of the number of
detectors used.
Is regardless to a suitable replacement in this situation? Or is my first sentence fine? Are there any alternative ways of phrasing this?
Some arrangements work better than others, regardless to the number of
detectors used.
"Regardless to" doesn't really work, I think—I understand the meaning, but regardless doesn't normally collocate with to, so it sounds odd. To my ears, there's nothing wrong with the first sentence. If you really want to avoid that doubled of, you could try this phrasing:
Some arrangements work better than others, no matter how many detectors are used.
Note that this is a bit less formal than your original.
Correct answer by Nicholas on July 15, 2021
"Regardless to" is the one that sounds awkward because it's utterly ungrammatical.
However, "regardless of", aside from being grammatically correct, sounds quite appropriate to my ear.
Some arrangements work better than others, regardless of the number of detectors used.
Here's an equally formal alternative you might want to consider:
Some arrangements work better than others, whatever the number of detectors used.
Answered by Elian on July 15, 2021
I think regardless-of sounds right to most people, largely due to its common usage.
Fair enough; but when I think about it a little, regardless OF sounds a bit off, however familiar.
If you take 'regard' as a synonym for 'consideration,' then think of the phrase 'show some consideration,' [in relation to a person] then that phrase would, to my ear, sound better followed by 'to' than by 'of.' Thus:
They showed no consideration to me.
sounds better than:
They showed no consideration of me.
So, perhaps
They showed no regard to me.
is preferable to:
They showed no regard of me.
So, regardless-to is, maybe, better than regardless-of.
You might also say 'without regard to' rather than 'without regard of'.
All academic, though. Nigh on impossible to change such ingrained linguistic habits.
Just my twopenneth :)
Andy
Answered by Andy on July 15, 2021
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