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Was not because of/ but of?

English Language & Usage Asked by rpcs3 on September 3, 2020

How do I say this properly, when I want to say that the result was not because of x but of y?

For example: The outcome was not because of x but (of) y?

Do I use of here?

2 Answers

'Because of' is a compound preposition {see OALD} and is never [AFAIK] split.

A river cuts through rock not because of its power but because of its persistence.

The whole preposition may sometimes be omitted:

*/??A river cuts through rock not because of its power but its persistence.

but re-ordering may be required:

A river cuts through rock because of its persistence, not [because of] its power.

Answered by Edwin Ashworth on September 3, 2020

Original: The outcome was not because of x but (of) y?

I would say parallelism (parallel structures) would require you at least to keep the "of" for clarity.

Either of the below would clearly show the parallel application of "because":

  1. ...not because of x but of y

  2. ...not because of x but because of y

Without the "of", the application of the parallel application of "because" to y is not clear.

Answered by Teacher Lee on September 3, 2020

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