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ESL forum > Grammar and Linguistics > Grammar query    

Grammar query



yingying
China

Grammar query
 
Dear all,
 
I would like to ask if the follwoing structure are right or wrong.
 
1. Doing sports is beneficial to health.
2. Doing sports is beneficial to combating chronic diseases.
 
I know it is correct to put a noun after "is beneficial to"
Is it correct to put a gerund after the phrase "is beneficial to"?
 
Thanks  in advance
 
 
 
 

1 Jun 2014      





Matthew@ELSP
Japan

Hi. I cannot tell you whether the �structure � you asked about (the 2nd structure) is grammatically perfect. I would suggest that it does not make sense though. Why? Because �combating chronic diseases � itself is beneficial to health, so it seems that the 2nd sentence says �sports is beneficial to something which is beneficial to health �. For the 2nd sentence, perhaps �effective in � / �beneficial as it combats...". I hope I am not too far off the point.

1 Jun 2014     



FrauSue
France

I would say:

Doing sport(s) is good for your health.
Doing sport(s) has health benefits.
Doing sport(s) can help to combat chronic diseases.

"Doing sport(s) is beneficial to health" isn �t wrong but is possibly not the most natural phrasing.

1 Jun 2014     



darryn
United Kingdom

I would say 1. is O.K. but 2. needs �for � instead of �to �. Bye.

1 Jun 2014     



yingying
China

Dear all,
 
What doubts me is  if we can use a gerund (doing something) after "beneficial to" or we should use  "to do something" after "beneficial to"
Please help me solve this problem. Thanks in advance!

2 Jun 2014     



nasreddine Sarsar
Tunisia

Beneficial to doing something does not exist in English. You should say something is beneficial to do something. I think it would be beneficial for each committee member to have a copy of the report (and not to having a copy of the report). This is according to the OZDIC dictionary which is a reliable source. http://www.ozdic.com This dictionary is a great learning tool in the sense that it provides its users with a plethora of examples and word collocations. I hope things are clear for you now.

2 Jun 2014