English Language & Usage Asked by user416883 on March 10, 2021
The phrase "as with" presumably stands for "as is the case with." But sometimes it does not fit the sentence: for example, I think "As with any other skill, the art of listening can be fine-tuned" should read "Like any other skill. . ." Or is the phrase "as with" now generally entrenched to cover even those sentences in which the grammar is technically incorrect?
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