English, asked by gsaksham2430, 3 months ago

I am not responsible the indisipiline in the college correct preposition

Answers

Answered by Woziha
0

Answer:

The short answer is that responsible is usually followed by the preposition for. If you want to know more, read below.

When the adjective responsible is used to describe a person or thing that caused something, or that has the job of managing something, it is followed by the preposition for, as in these examples:

The technicians found the glitch that was responsible for [=caused] the computer crash.

Who was responsible for [=caused] the accident?

She is responsible for [=has the job of managing] the company's publicity.

The committee is responsible for [=is managing] organizing the dance.

When responsible is used to mean "capable and trustworthy," no preposition is used, as in these examples:

She is a very responsible worker.

Is he responsible enough to have a car?

Occasionally, though not often, responsible is used to describe someone who is working under the direction and authority of a specific person in an organization. In this case, responsible is followed by the preposition to:

I am responsible to her, and she is directly responsible to the company president.

Explanation:

please mark me as brainiest.

Similar questions