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Is it really OK to use “because of”?


What defines a native English Speaker?Interpretation of “My dream is becoming an English teacher.”What does “You tell him!” mean?Which version is correct and normally used, “between you and me” or “between you and I”?As a “someone” usageWhat “have gone to someone” really mean?“You are special” phrase double meaningYou say that - meaningStep to it, to itI didn't have much of a choice













1















I learned from a YouTube video that says ""because of" is not correct". But my friend argues that "because of" is correct. Also, I see a lot of people writing and saying "because of". Here is a example:




That's because of you.




So, is it actually correct to use "because of" or only native speakers think it's correct or it's not correct at all?










share|improve this question







New contributor




zixuan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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    1















    I learned from a YouTube video that says ""because of" is not correct". But my friend argues that "because of" is correct. Also, I see a lot of people writing and saying "because of". Here is a example:




    That's because of you.




    So, is it actually correct to use "because of" or only native speakers think it's correct or it's not correct at all?










    share|improve this question







    New contributor




    zixuan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.























      1












      1








      1








      I learned from a YouTube video that says ""because of" is not correct". But my friend argues that "because of" is correct. Also, I see a lot of people writing and saying "because of". Here is a example:




      That's because of you.




      So, is it actually correct to use "because of" or only native speakers think it's correct or it's not correct at all?










      share|improve this question







      New contributor




      zixuan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.












      I learned from a YouTube video that says ""because of" is not correct". But my friend argues that "because of" is correct. Also, I see a lot of people writing and saying "because of". Here is a example:




      That's because of you.




      So, is it actually correct to use "because of" or only native speakers think it's correct or it's not correct at all?







      phrase-usage






      share|improve this question







      New contributor




      zixuan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.











      share|improve this question







      New contributor




      zixuan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.









      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question






      New contributor




      zixuan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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      asked 1 hour ago









      zixuanzixuan

      1085




      1085




      New contributor




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      New contributor





      zixuan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.






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      Check out our Code of Conduct.






















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          3














          Actually, 'of' can be correct, in standard grammar, after because. It depends on what comes after that.



          If the next part is a complete and potentially free-standing clause (say, a verb phrase), then you don't need (or want) of:




          That's because I'm smart.

          I'm hungry because I haven't eaten.

          You're only saying that because I'm pretty.

          I'm wet because it's raining.




          But if the bit after it is a noun phrase, you need the of:




          That's because of my asthma.

          I'm angry because of your tone.

          I'm happy because of you.

          You're only saying that because of my looks.




          You will also run into a lot of non-standard usage in some places using the of even where it isn't used in standard grammar.






          share|improve this answer
























          • +1 And vice-versa. Because language.

            – StoneyB
            30 mins ago



















          0














          Both because and because of are correct in different contexts.





          • Because is used by itself when the cause is expressed as a clause:




            He opened his umbrella because it was raining.





          • Because is used with of when the cause is expressed as a noun or nominal:




            He opened his umbrella because of the rain.




            However, there is a fairly new hip usage which drops the of.




            He opened his umbrella because rain.




            This usage is quite widespread, but not yet ready for formal registers. In her admirable article "English Has a New Preposition, Because Internet" Megan Garber describes it as "exceptionally bloggy and aggressively casual and implicitly ironic".








          share|improve this answer
























          • I wouldn't call that so much a new usage as a bit of deliberately and creatively non-standard grammar. The fact it's 'wrong' is part of its charm.

            – SamBC
            21 mins ago











          • @SamBC That's where new usages come from. 600 years ago most of what traditionalists call subordinating conjunctions (including bare because with a content clause) were similar truncations of because/for/when/before/etc that [clause].

            – StoneyB
            11 mins ago













          Your Answer








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          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes








          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          3














          Actually, 'of' can be correct, in standard grammar, after because. It depends on what comes after that.



          If the next part is a complete and potentially free-standing clause (say, a verb phrase), then you don't need (or want) of:




          That's because I'm smart.

          I'm hungry because I haven't eaten.

          You're only saying that because I'm pretty.

          I'm wet because it's raining.




          But if the bit after it is a noun phrase, you need the of:




          That's because of my asthma.

          I'm angry because of your tone.

          I'm happy because of you.

          You're only saying that because of my looks.




          You will also run into a lot of non-standard usage in some places using the of even where it isn't used in standard grammar.






          share|improve this answer
























          • +1 And vice-versa. Because language.

            – StoneyB
            30 mins ago
















          3














          Actually, 'of' can be correct, in standard grammar, after because. It depends on what comes after that.



          If the next part is a complete and potentially free-standing clause (say, a verb phrase), then you don't need (or want) of:




          That's because I'm smart.

          I'm hungry because I haven't eaten.

          You're only saying that because I'm pretty.

          I'm wet because it's raining.




          But if the bit after it is a noun phrase, you need the of:




          That's because of my asthma.

          I'm angry because of your tone.

          I'm happy because of you.

          You're only saying that because of my looks.




          You will also run into a lot of non-standard usage in some places using the of even where it isn't used in standard grammar.






          share|improve this answer
























          • +1 And vice-versa. Because language.

            – StoneyB
            30 mins ago














          3












          3








          3







          Actually, 'of' can be correct, in standard grammar, after because. It depends on what comes after that.



          If the next part is a complete and potentially free-standing clause (say, a verb phrase), then you don't need (or want) of:




          That's because I'm smart.

          I'm hungry because I haven't eaten.

          You're only saying that because I'm pretty.

          I'm wet because it's raining.




          But if the bit after it is a noun phrase, you need the of:




          That's because of my asthma.

          I'm angry because of your tone.

          I'm happy because of you.

          You're only saying that because of my looks.




          You will also run into a lot of non-standard usage in some places using the of even where it isn't used in standard grammar.






          share|improve this answer













          Actually, 'of' can be correct, in standard grammar, after because. It depends on what comes after that.



          If the next part is a complete and potentially free-standing clause (say, a verb phrase), then you don't need (or want) of:




          That's because I'm smart.

          I'm hungry because I haven't eaten.

          You're only saying that because I'm pretty.

          I'm wet because it's raining.




          But if the bit after it is a noun phrase, you need the of:




          That's because of my asthma.

          I'm angry because of your tone.

          I'm happy because of you.

          You're only saying that because of my looks.




          You will also run into a lot of non-standard usage in some places using the of even where it isn't used in standard grammar.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 43 mins ago









          SamBCSamBC

          6,099426




          6,099426













          • +1 And vice-versa. Because language.

            – StoneyB
            30 mins ago



















          • +1 And vice-versa. Because language.

            – StoneyB
            30 mins ago

















          +1 And vice-versa. Because language.

          – StoneyB
          30 mins ago





          +1 And vice-versa. Because language.

          – StoneyB
          30 mins ago













          0














          Both because and because of are correct in different contexts.





          • Because is used by itself when the cause is expressed as a clause:




            He opened his umbrella because it was raining.





          • Because is used with of when the cause is expressed as a noun or nominal:




            He opened his umbrella because of the rain.




            However, there is a fairly new hip usage which drops the of.




            He opened his umbrella because rain.




            This usage is quite widespread, but not yet ready for formal registers. In her admirable article "English Has a New Preposition, Because Internet" Megan Garber describes it as "exceptionally bloggy and aggressively casual and implicitly ironic".








          share|improve this answer
























          • I wouldn't call that so much a new usage as a bit of deliberately and creatively non-standard grammar. The fact it's 'wrong' is part of its charm.

            – SamBC
            21 mins ago











          • @SamBC That's where new usages come from. 600 years ago most of what traditionalists call subordinating conjunctions (including bare because with a content clause) were similar truncations of because/for/when/before/etc that [clause].

            – StoneyB
            11 mins ago


















          0














          Both because and because of are correct in different contexts.





          • Because is used by itself when the cause is expressed as a clause:




            He opened his umbrella because it was raining.





          • Because is used with of when the cause is expressed as a noun or nominal:




            He opened his umbrella because of the rain.




            However, there is a fairly new hip usage which drops the of.




            He opened his umbrella because rain.




            This usage is quite widespread, but not yet ready for formal registers. In her admirable article "English Has a New Preposition, Because Internet" Megan Garber describes it as "exceptionally bloggy and aggressively casual and implicitly ironic".








          share|improve this answer
























          • I wouldn't call that so much a new usage as a bit of deliberately and creatively non-standard grammar. The fact it's 'wrong' is part of its charm.

            – SamBC
            21 mins ago











          • @SamBC That's where new usages come from. 600 years ago most of what traditionalists call subordinating conjunctions (including bare because with a content clause) were similar truncations of because/for/when/before/etc that [clause].

            – StoneyB
            11 mins ago
















          0












          0








          0







          Both because and because of are correct in different contexts.





          • Because is used by itself when the cause is expressed as a clause:




            He opened his umbrella because it was raining.





          • Because is used with of when the cause is expressed as a noun or nominal:




            He opened his umbrella because of the rain.




            However, there is a fairly new hip usage which drops the of.




            He opened his umbrella because rain.




            This usage is quite widespread, but not yet ready for formal registers. In her admirable article "English Has a New Preposition, Because Internet" Megan Garber describes it as "exceptionally bloggy and aggressively casual and implicitly ironic".








          share|improve this answer













          Both because and because of are correct in different contexts.





          • Because is used by itself when the cause is expressed as a clause:




            He opened his umbrella because it was raining.





          • Because is used with of when the cause is expressed as a noun or nominal:




            He opened his umbrella because of the rain.




            However, there is a fairly new hip usage which drops the of.




            He opened his umbrella because rain.




            This usage is quite widespread, but not yet ready for formal registers. In her admirable article "English Has a New Preposition, Because Internet" Megan Garber describes it as "exceptionally bloggy and aggressively casual and implicitly ironic".









          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 31 mins ago









          StoneyBStoneyB

          171k10234414




          171k10234414













          • I wouldn't call that so much a new usage as a bit of deliberately and creatively non-standard grammar. The fact it's 'wrong' is part of its charm.

            – SamBC
            21 mins ago











          • @SamBC That's where new usages come from. 600 years ago most of what traditionalists call subordinating conjunctions (including bare because with a content clause) were similar truncations of because/for/when/before/etc that [clause].

            – StoneyB
            11 mins ago





















          • I wouldn't call that so much a new usage as a bit of deliberately and creatively non-standard grammar. The fact it's 'wrong' is part of its charm.

            – SamBC
            21 mins ago











          • @SamBC That's where new usages come from. 600 years ago most of what traditionalists call subordinating conjunctions (including bare because with a content clause) were similar truncations of because/for/when/before/etc that [clause].

            – StoneyB
            11 mins ago



















          I wouldn't call that so much a new usage as a bit of deliberately and creatively non-standard grammar. The fact it's 'wrong' is part of its charm.

          – SamBC
          21 mins ago





          I wouldn't call that so much a new usage as a bit of deliberately and creatively non-standard grammar. The fact it's 'wrong' is part of its charm.

          – SamBC
          21 mins ago













          @SamBC That's where new usages come from. 600 years ago most of what traditionalists call subordinating conjunctions (including bare because with a content clause) were similar truncations of because/for/when/before/etc that [clause].

          – StoneyB
          11 mins ago







          @SamBC That's where new usages come from. 600 years ago most of what traditionalists call subordinating conjunctions (including bare because with a content clause) were similar truncations of because/for/when/before/etc that [clause].

          – StoneyB
          11 mins ago












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