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Laurel
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Possible Duplicate:
This question has been asked at/on SO?

Which sentence is grammatically correct?

  • The papers are freely available at the journal website.
  • The papers are freely available on the journal website.

Using Google's search results:

So, I inferred that both variants are popular. Is this method (comparing the number of results by Googling) sound?

Possible Duplicate:
This question has been asked at/on SO?

Which sentence is grammatically correct?

  • The papers are freely available at the journal website.
  • The papers are freely available on the journal website.

Using Google's search results:

So, I inferred that both variants are popular. Is this method (comparing the number of results by Googling) sound?

Which sentence is grammatically correct?

  • The papers are freely available at the journal website.
  • The papers are freely available on the journal website.

Using Google's search results:

So, I inferred that both variants are popular. Is this method (comparing the number of results by Googling) sound?

Post Closed as "Duplicate" by Laurel
Post Reopened by Laurel
shortened URLs going back to stackexchange are rather silly. Also clean up the other Google URLs while we're at it
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Possible Duplicate:
This question has been asked at/on SO?This question has been asked at/on SO?

Which sentence is grammatically correct?

  • The papers are freely available at the journal website.
  • The papers are freely available on the journal website.

Using Google's search results:

So, I inferred that both variants are popular. Is this method (comparing the number of results by Googling) sound?

Possible Duplicate:
This question has been asked at/on SO?

Which sentence is grammatically correct?

  • The papers are freely available at the journal website.
  • The papers are freely available on the journal website.

Using Google's search results:

So, I inferred that both variants are popular. Is this method (comparing the number of results by Googling) sound?

Possible Duplicate:
This question has been asked at/on SO?

Which sentence is grammatically correct?

  • The papers are freely available at the journal website.
  • The papers are freely available on the journal website.

Using Google's search results:

So, I inferred that both variants are popular. Is this method (comparing the number of results by Googling) sound?

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Question Protected by user2683
deleted 66 characters in body; edited title
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Daniel
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"on "On website" or "at website"?

Possible Duplicate:
This question has been asked at/on SO?This question has been asked at/on SO?

Which sentence is grammatically correct:?

  • The papers are freely available at the journal website.
  • The papers are freely available on the journal website.

Using Google's search results:

So, I inferred that both variants are popular. Is this method--- (comparing the number of results afterby Googling---sound) sound?

"on website" or "at website"

Possible Duplicate:
This question has been asked at/on SO?

Which sentence is grammatically correct:

  • The papers are freely available at the journal website.
  • The papers are freely available on the journal website.

Using Google's search results:

So, I inferred that both variants are popular. Is this method---comparing the number of results after Googling---sound?

"On website" or "at website"?

Possible Duplicate:
This question has been asked at/on SO?

Which sentence is grammatically correct?

  • The papers are freely available at the journal website.
  • The papers are freely available on the journal website.

Using Google's search results:

So, I inferred that both variants are popular. Is this method (comparing the number of results by Googling) sound?

insert duplicate link
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Post Closed as "exact duplicate" by RegDwigнt, nohat
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Sadeq Dousti
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