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Can some one explain when to use "divided over" and "divided on"?
Police divided over detention limit Doctors Divided Over Warning Strike UEFA divided over how to deal with players who dive Economists divided over Russian inflation cause
Organized labor divided on Clinton, Obama -( CNN.com) Nation Is Divided on Drawdown Of Troops (washington post) Dem Senators Divided on Obama's Call for Repealing Defense of ...
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I was always under the impression that you are "divided over" an issue. I guess either is correct. To me, "divided over" sounds better.
I imagine seeing 2 labor unions standing at a table facing each other yelling "Obama is better!" "No, Clinton is better!" with a paper on the table with headline "Debate over Dem nomination rages", hence the "divided over".
This might be odd, but that's how I remember it
x2suresh
Flollowing setences are from major news papers.
Can some one explain when to use "divided over" and "divided on"?
Police divided over detention limit Doctors Divided Over Warning Strike UEFA divided over how to deal with players who dive Economists divided over Russian inflation cause
Organized labor divided on Clinton, Obama -( CNN.com) Nation Is Divided on Drawdown Of Troops (washington post) Dem Senators Divided on Obama's Call for Repealing Defense of ...
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Archived Topic
Hi there,
This topic has been closed and archived due to inactivity or violation of community quality standards. No more replies are possible here.
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Still interested in this question? Check out the "Best Topics" block above for a better discussion on this exact question, as well as several more related questions.