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Discover LudwigThe phrase "attends on" is not commonly used in standard written English and may be considered incorrect in many contexts.
It can be used in specific contexts, particularly in legal or formal writing, to indicate that something is dependent on or related to another thing.
Example: "The decision attends on the outcome of the investigation."
Alternatives: "depends on" or "is contingent upon".
Exact(21)
"This is a real problem, discussed at almost every meeting one attends on campus, that can't be simply dismissed," said Drew Faust, president of Harvard University.
Keegan said it a few weeks ago to a young boy on a local phone-in and he repeated Henry's name again this week at one of the many low-key functions Keegan attends on Tyneside.
She attends on both the child neurology service as well as the adult stroke service.
Seligman, who learned of the program via social media, attends on orders from the Air Force.
He attends on the critical care services at New York Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center.
Alexander Sprinkle, a member who also attends on Monday nights, lives in an apartment in the society's headquarters.
Similar(39)
All patients received cardiopulmonary and anthropometric baseline assessments and attended on-site exercise classes once per week.
√ = student attended on-site.
Students were free to attend on any one of three exam days.
personnel, estimates were that one-third to one-half attended on Monday.
Unfortunately, however, the race in Turkey has been one of the least attended on the calendar.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com