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'for' and 'to' about indicating 'direction' | WordReference Forums 17 Jun 2012 · You can use "for" with many verbs of motion, Jullianus. I interpret it as "in the direction of" or "with a destination in mind": He ran for the house, but they gunned him down …
at destination / at the destination | WordReference Forums 13 Dec 2014 · "Even before they leave, migrants tend to have taken on some of the characteristics of the population at destination, but they can never completely lose some which …
last stop/final destination - WordReference Forums 16 Jul 2011 · Shanghai Subway uses Chinese and English billingual for announcement. For the last stop of a line service, it announces: next is the final destination, which sounds odd to me. …
To head / to / for / toward | WordReference Forums 12 Feb 2009 · I am head ing /head ed to/for/toward (s)the subway station. All of the above prepositions are fine, and mean much the same. Note that while you can say "I am heading …
en route pour / vers + destination - WordReference Forums 24 May 2022 · Les deux sont correctes : pour indique le but final de la destination, tandis que vers donne une direction. P.S.: Pour et vers sont des prépositions, pas des adverbes.
destination dining - WordReference Forums 11 Feb 2007 · Como se podría traducir o describir este concepto: The ultra-exclusive resort offers destination dining and a full-service spa. en un sitios del Internet encontré: 1) Destination …
desservir une destination - WordReference Forums 17 Apr 2008 · Bonjour :) Comment dirait-on en anglais "la compagnie aérienne dessert 43 destinations." Est-ce que "The airline provides a service to 43 destinations" est correct ? Merci …
arrive/reach (destination) - WordReference Forums 7 Apr 2011 · hi all, I´d like to know what´s the difference between the verbs "arrive" and "reach" a destination and which preposition I must use with them. Thanks...
or bust! - WordReference Forums 13 Oct 2012 · Hi, native speakers of English! I was wondering if the expression "... or bust!" can be used in cases where we are not talking about a destination. For example, I know it's correct to …
Destined for / Destined to | WordReference Forums 17 Mar 2018 · “The money was destined to schools” is not idiomatic (in BE). In that sentence, you would have to say “destined for”. It means the school was the money’s destination. “Destined …