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"year after year" and "year by year"
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What's the difference between "year after year" and "year by year"? – a reader in Japan
Answer
The expressions year after year and year by year have similar meanings, but there are differences in the way they are used.
Year after year
Year after year is often used to focus attention on the fact that something is repeated over and over, as in this example sentence:
- We vacationed there year after year, until our kids grew up.
or in this quote from Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., about U.S. government spending:
- “A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death.”
Year by year
Year by year is used to focus attention on the process, something that happens gradually rather than all at once, as in these examples:
- Slowly, year by year, they learned how to handle themselves in difficult situations.
- The football player said he’s taking a year by year approach to career decisions, while he is recovering from his injury.
Year by year is also used to label charts or lists of data for a series of years, as in this chart title:
- NBA (National Basketball Association) Scoring Leaders - Year by Year
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