continue [through] to











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I'm wondering what contribution the word "through" makes to the following sentence:




The trend continued [through] to April.




How does the above differ from the following?




The trend continued to April.



The trend continued until April.




I'd appreciate your help.










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  • 1




    The term through is very commonly used in AusEng. Through is often used to denote inclusion, thereby "The trend continued [through] to April.` would mean that the "trend continued into April. "
    – 3kstc
    Jun 20 '17 at 0:53










  • It establishes the recurring nature of something. I'm not a fan of your sample sentence. "Continued through to" does not normally appear with continuous entities such as trends, but rather with discrete entities such as payments. It works well with fuzzy concepts like "effects" or "manifestations" which might be either. "For Soviet Gulag survivors, the negative consequences of repression continued through to the end of the victim's lifetime and beyond, in ever widening circles." - On Living Through Soviet Russia - Page 214.
    – Phil Sweet
    Jul 20 '17 at 0:23










  • I think the origin is that it carried through something to April. Most likely something including part of March. Correct? I don't know, but that is likely where it comes from. Doesn't seem any more of a sin than "turn off onto a side road," where it's a given that the object of "off" is "that road".
    – Chuckk Hubbard
    Apr 16 at 8:03

















up vote
1
down vote

favorite
1












I'm wondering what contribution the word "through" makes to the following sentence:




The trend continued [through] to April.




How does the above differ from the following?




The trend continued to April.



The trend continued until April.




I'd appreciate your help.










share|improve this question
















bumped to the homepage by Community 3 hours ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.











  • 1




    The term through is very commonly used in AusEng. Through is often used to denote inclusion, thereby "The trend continued [through] to April.` would mean that the "trend continued into April. "
    – 3kstc
    Jun 20 '17 at 0:53










  • It establishes the recurring nature of something. I'm not a fan of your sample sentence. "Continued through to" does not normally appear with continuous entities such as trends, but rather with discrete entities such as payments. It works well with fuzzy concepts like "effects" or "manifestations" which might be either. "For Soviet Gulag survivors, the negative consequences of repression continued through to the end of the victim's lifetime and beyond, in ever widening circles." - On Living Through Soviet Russia - Page 214.
    – Phil Sweet
    Jul 20 '17 at 0:23










  • I think the origin is that it carried through something to April. Most likely something including part of March. Correct? I don't know, but that is likely where it comes from. Doesn't seem any more of a sin than "turn off onto a side road," where it's a given that the object of "off" is "that road".
    – Chuckk Hubbard
    Apr 16 at 8:03















up vote
1
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
1
down vote

favorite
1






1





I'm wondering what contribution the word "through" makes to the following sentence:




The trend continued [through] to April.




How does the above differ from the following?




The trend continued to April.



The trend continued until April.




I'd appreciate your help.










share|improve this question















I'm wondering what contribution the word "through" makes to the following sentence:




The trend continued [through] to April.




How does the above differ from the following?




The trend continued to April.



The trend continued until April.




I'd appreciate your help.







adverbials






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 20 '17 at 20:59









Barmar

9,5391429




9,5391429










asked Apr 19 '17 at 13:28









Apollyon

7453932




7453932





bumped to the homepage by Community 3 hours ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.







bumped to the homepage by Community 3 hours ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.










  • 1




    The term through is very commonly used in AusEng. Through is often used to denote inclusion, thereby "The trend continued [through] to April.` would mean that the "trend continued into April. "
    – 3kstc
    Jun 20 '17 at 0:53










  • It establishes the recurring nature of something. I'm not a fan of your sample sentence. "Continued through to" does not normally appear with continuous entities such as trends, but rather with discrete entities such as payments. It works well with fuzzy concepts like "effects" or "manifestations" which might be either. "For Soviet Gulag survivors, the negative consequences of repression continued through to the end of the victim's lifetime and beyond, in ever widening circles." - On Living Through Soviet Russia - Page 214.
    – Phil Sweet
    Jul 20 '17 at 0:23










  • I think the origin is that it carried through something to April. Most likely something including part of March. Correct? I don't know, but that is likely where it comes from. Doesn't seem any more of a sin than "turn off onto a side road," where it's a given that the object of "off" is "that road".
    – Chuckk Hubbard
    Apr 16 at 8:03
















  • 1




    The term through is very commonly used in AusEng. Through is often used to denote inclusion, thereby "The trend continued [through] to April.` would mean that the "trend continued into April. "
    – 3kstc
    Jun 20 '17 at 0:53










  • It establishes the recurring nature of something. I'm not a fan of your sample sentence. "Continued through to" does not normally appear with continuous entities such as trends, but rather with discrete entities such as payments. It works well with fuzzy concepts like "effects" or "manifestations" which might be either. "For Soviet Gulag survivors, the negative consequences of repression continued through to the end of the victim's lifetime and beyond, in ever widening circles." - On Living Through Soviet Russia - Page 214.
    – Phil Sweet
    Jul 20 '17 at 0:23










  • I think the origin is that it carried through something to April. Most likely something including part of March. Correct? I don't know, but that is likely where it comes from. Doesn't seem any more of a sin than "turn off onto a side road," where it's a given that the object of "off" is "that road".
    – Chuckk Hubbard
    Apr 16 at 8:03










1




1




The term through is very commonly used in AusEng. Through is often used to denote inclusion, thereby "The trend continued [through] to April.` would mean that the "trend continued into April. "
– 3kstc
Jun 20 '17 at 0:53




The term through is very commonly used in AusEng. Through is often used to denote inclusion, thereby "The trend continued [through] to April.` would mean that the "trend continued into April. "
– 3kstc
Jun 20 '17 at 0:53












It establishes the recurring nature of something. I'm not a fan of your sample sentence. "Continued through to" does not normally appear with continuous entities such as trends, but rather with discrete entities such as payments. It works well with fuzzy concepts like "effects" or "manifestations" which might be either. "For Soviet Gulag survivors, the negative consequences of repression continued through to the end of the victim's lifetime and beyond, in ever widening circles." - On Living Through Soviet Russia - Page 214.
– Phil Sweet
Jul 20 '17 at 0:23




It establishes the recurring nature of something. I'm not a fan of your sample sentence. "Continued through to" does not normally appear with continuous entities such as trends, but rather with discrete entities such as payments. It works well with fuzzy concepts like "effects" or "manifestations" which might be either. "For Soviet Gulag survivors, the negative consequences of repression continued through to the end of the victim's lifetime and beyond, in ever widening circles." - On Living Through Soviet Russia - Page 214.
– Phil Sweet
Jul 20 '17 at 0:23












I think the origin is that it carried through something to April. Most likely something including part of March. Correct? I don't know, but that is likely where it comes from. Doesn't seem any more of a sin than "turn off onto a side road," where it's a given that the object of "off" is "that road".
– Chuckk Hubbard
Apr 16 at 8:03






I think the origin is that it carried through something to April. Most likely something including part of March. Correct? I don't know, but that is likely where it comes from. Doesn't seem any more of a sin than "turn off onto a side road," where it's a given that the object of "off" is "that road".
– Chuckk Hubbard
Apr 16 at 8:03












1 Answer
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I think what you'd actually want to say is, "The trend continued through April." This implies that the trend continued until the end of April. Conversely, "The trend continued until April," implies that the trend continued until the start of April.



I would not say, "The trend continued to April," or, "The trend continued through to April," as both are a little awkward/ambiguous.






share|improve this answer





















  • can you say "continue well into April." meaning the trend is still going on in April and when it stops is unknown?
    – Apollyon
    Apr 19 '17 at 13:49










  • "The tend will continue well into April," is a prediction that the trend will continue until some unspecified point in April that is not "the beginning" of April. "The trend will continue into April," is a prediction that the trend will continue until some unspecified point in April; could be the beginning, could be the end, could be the middle.
    – Azuaron
    Apr 19 '17 at 13:52










  • But you can also use it in the past tense: "The trend continued well into April." which means it ended sometime after the beginning of April.
    – Barmar
    Apr 20 '17 at 21:01













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1 Answer
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up vote
0
down vote













I think what you'd actually want to say is, "The trend continued through April." This implies that the trend continued until the end of April. Conversely, "The trend continued until April," implies that the trend continued until the start of April.



I would not say, "The trend continued to April," or, "The trend continued through to April," as both are a little awkward/ambiguous.






share|improve this answer





















  • can you say "continue well into April." meaning the trend is still going on in April and when it stops is unknown?
    – Apollyon
    Apr 19 '17 at 13:49










  • "The tend will continue well into April," is a prediction that the trend will continue until some unspecified point in April that is not "the beginning" of April. "The trend will continue into April," is a prediction that the trend will continue until some unspecified point in April; could be the beginning, could be the end, could be the middle.
    – Azuaron
    Apr 19 '17 at 13:52










  • But you can also use it in the past tense: "The trend continued well into April." which means it ended sometime after the beginning of April.
    – Barmar
    Apr 20 '17 at 21:01

















up vote
0
down vote













I think what you'd actually want to say is, "The trend continued through April." This implies that the trend continued until the end of April. Conversely, "The trend continued until April," implies that the trend continued until the start of April.



I would not say, "The trend continued to April," or, "The trend continued through to April," as both are a little awkward/ambiguous.






share|improve this answer





















  • can you say "continue well into April." meaning the trend is still going on in April and when it stops is unknown?
    – Apollyon
    Apr 19 '17 at 13:49










  • "The tend will continue well into April," is a prediction that the trend will continue until some unspecified point in April that is not "the beginning" of April. "The trend will continue into April," is a prediction that the trend will continue until some unspecified point in April; could be the beginning, could be the end, could be the middle.
    – Azuaron
    Apr 19 '17 at 13:52










  • But you can also use it in the past tense: "The trend continued well into April." which means it ended sometime after the beginning of April.
    – Barmar
    Apr 20 '17 at 21:01















up vote
0
down vote










up vote
0
down vote









I think what you'd actually want to say is, "The trend continued through April." This implies that the trend continued until the end of April. Conversely, "The trend continued until April," implies that the trend continued until the start of April.



I would not say, "The trend continued to April," or, "The trend continued through to April," as both are a little awkward/ambiguous.






share|improve this answer












I think what you'd actually want to say is, "The trend continued through April." This implies that the trend continued until the end of April. Conversely, "The trend continued until April," implies that the trend continued until the start of April.



I would not say, "The trend continued to April," or, "The trend continued through to April," as both are a little awkward/ambiguous.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Apr 19 '17 at 13:46









Azuaron

30314




30314












  • can you say "continue well into April." meaning the trend is still going on in April and when it stops is unknown?
    – Apollyon
    Apr 19 '17 at 13:49










  • "The tend will continue well into April," is a prediction that the trend will continue until some unspecified point in April that is not "the beginning" of April. "The trend will continue into April," is a prediction that the trend will continue until some unspecified point in April; could be the beginning, could be the end, could be the middle.
    – Azuaron
    Apr 19 '17 at 13:52










  • But you can also use it in the past tense: "The trend continued well into April." which means it ended sometime after the beginning of April.
    – Barmar
    Apr 20 '17 at 21:01




















  • can you say "continue well into April." meaning the trend is still going on in April and when it stops is unknown?
    – Apollyon
    Apr 19 '17 at 13:49










  • "The tend will continue well into April," is a prediction that the trend will continue until some unspecified point in April that is not "the beginning" of April. "The trend will continue into April," is a prediction that the trend will continue until some unspecified point in April; could be the beginning, could be the end, could be the middle.
    – Azuaron
    Apr 19 '17 at 13:52










  • But you can also use it in the past tense: "The trend continued well into April." which means it ended sometime after the beginning of April.
    – Barmar
    Apr 20 '17 at 21:01


















can you say "continue well into April." meaning the trend is still going on in April and when it stops is unknown?
– Apollyon
Apr 19 '17 at 13:49




can you say "continue well into April." meaning the trend is still going on in April and when it stops is unknown?
– Apollyon
Apr 19 '17 at 13:49












"The tend will continue well into April," is a prediction that the trend will continue until some unspecified point in April that is not "the beginning" of April. "The trend will continue into April," is a prediction that the trend will continue until some unspecified point in April; could be the beginning, could be the end, could be the middle.
– Azuaron
Apr 19 '17 at 13:52




"The tend will continue well into April," is a prediction that the trend will continue until some unspecified point in April that is not "the beginning" of April. "The trend will continue into April," is a prediction that the trend will continue until some unspecified point in April; could be the beginning, could be the end, could be the middle.
– Azuaron
Apr 19 '17 at 13:52












But you can also use it in the past tense: "The trend continued well into April." which means it ended sometime after the beginning of April.
– Barmar
Apr 20 '17 at 21:01






But you can also use it in the past tense: "The trend continued well into April." which means it ended sometime after the beginning of April.
– Barmar
Apr 20 '17 at 21:01




















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