Another word for “reason to care”












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e.g. "the use of emotive, interpersonal language gives the reader a [reason to care about the topic at hand]"



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  • Welcome to EL&U! For single-word-requests it is considered good practice to provide a sentence with a gap for the word you are looking for to increase the clarity of the question. An example might be "When I poke a jelly and is moves in a wavy motion, it is ____.", where the answer might be "wobble".
    – A Lambent Eye
    2 days ago
















0














e.g. "the use of emotive, interpersonal language gives the reader a [reason to care about the topic at hand]"



Thanks










share|improve this question







New contributor




R. Lang is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • Welcome to EL&U! For single-word-requests it is considered good practice to provide a sentence with a gap for the word you are looking for to increase the clarity of the question. An example might be "When I poke a jelly and is moves in a wavy motion, it is ____.", where the answer might be "wobble".
    – A Lambent Eye
    2 days ago














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0








0







e.g. "the use of emotive, interpersonal language gives the reader a [reason to care about the topic at hand]"



Thanks










share|improve this question







New contributor




R. Lang is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











e.g. "the use of emotive, interpersonal language gives the reader a [reason to care about the topic at hand]"



Thanks







single-word-requests






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asked 2 days ago









R. Lang

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New contributor





R. Lang is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






R. Lang is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • Welcome to EL&U! For single-word-requests it is considered good practice to provide a sentence with a gap for the word you are looking for to increase the clarity of the question. An example might be "When I poke a jelly and is moves in a wavy motion, it is ____.", where the answer might be "wobble".
    – A Lambent Eye
    2 days ago


















  • Welcome to EL&U! For single-word-requests it is considered good practice to provide a sentence with a gap for the word you are looking for to increase the clarity of the question. An example might be "When I poke a jelly and is moves in a wavy motion, it is ____.", where the answer might be "wobble".
    – A Lambent Eye
    2 days ago
















Welcome to EL&U! For single-word-requests it is considered good practice to provide a sentence with a gap for the word you are looking for to increase the clarity of the question. An example might be "When I poke a jelly and is moves in a wavy motion, it is ____.", where the answer might be "wobble".
– A Lambent Eye
2 days ago




Welcome to EL&U! For single-word-requests it is considered good practice to provide a sentence with a gap for the word you are looking for to increase the clarity of the question. An example might be "When I poke a jelly and is moves in a wavy motion, it is ____.", where the answer might be "wobble".
– A Lambent Eye
2 days ago










1 Answer
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Relate can work there quite well, but it still needs the reason to _ about.



If you wish relate to replace reason to care, You can rephrase your sentence to:
The use of emotive, interpersonal languages helps the reader to relate to the topic at hand.



dictionary.com



relate




  1. to establish a social or sympathetic relationship with a person or thing:
    two sisters unable to relate to each other.






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    1 Answer
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    active

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    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    0














    Relate can work there quite well, but it still needs the reason to _ about.



    If you wish relate to replace reason to care, You can rephrase your sentence to:
    The use of emotive, interpersonal languages helps the reader to relate to the topic at hand.



    dictionary.com



    relate




    1. to establish a social or sympathetic relationship with a person or thing:
      two sisters unable to relate to each other.






    share|improve this answer


























      0














      Relate can work there quite well, but it still needs the reason to _ about.



      If you wish relate to replace reason to care, You can rephrase your sentence to:
      The use of emotive, interpersonal languages helps the reader to relate to the topic at hand.



      dictionary.com



      relate




      1. to establish a social or sympathetic relationship with a person or thing:
        two sisters unable to relate to each other.






      share|improve this answer
























        0












        0








        0






        Relate can work there quite well, but it still needs the reason to _ about.



        If you wish relate to replace reason to care, You can rephrase your sentence to:
        The use of emotive, interpersonal languages helps the reader to relate to the topic at hand.



        dictionary.com



        relate




        1. to establish a social or sympathetic relationship with a person or thing:
          two sisters unable to relate to each other.






        share|improve this answer












        Relate can work there quite well, but it still needs the reason to _ about.



        If you wish relate to replace reason to care, You can rephrase your sentence to:
        The use of emotive, interpersonal languages helps the reader to relate to the topic at hand.



        dictionary.com



        relate




        1. to establish a social or sympathetic relationship with a person or thing:
          two sisters unable to relate to each other.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 2 days ago









        Uhtred Ragnarsson

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