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'Because' and 'Since'* K" d- g% S% d
Since You Asked...' o1 D/ C+ G, f$ y
By Evan Jenkins k+ _9 e9 ]4 P: ]+ t) ^3 ]* z
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André E. Maillho, managing editor of Gambit, an alternative weekly in New Orleans, noticed that "you, like millions of other Americans, tend to use the word 'since' to convey a causative relationship," and added, "An old editor once scolded me to differentiate between 'since' and 'because' and it's been a reflex ever since...What's your take?" i; g3 X( r4 Q' s2 a: }% O
9 v( I- h. m+ _8 K' L: c) P( b5 `That old editor once had a fairly numerous following, but the words are usually interchangeable. A problem can arise ̬ maybe the reason for the old editor's edict—if "since" can be read mistakenly in its time sense: "Since she called him a fool, he has stopped campaigning" is ambiguous, for example. When there's no trap of that kind, "since" means "because" and vice versa." X, V2 B- o, {
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