preference
preference — noun
1. a stronger liking for one person, thing, or plan than for another, or the option
a stronger liking for one person, thing, or plan than for another, or the option you would choose first
Maya showed a clear preference for tea over sweet bottled drinks.
pattern: preference for + noun over + noun
On rainy weekends, Ben's preference is staying home with old films.
pattern: preference is + -ing
The survey found a strong customer preference for larger phone screens.
Among the twins, Grandma had no preference between blue socks and red ones.
For lunch, Carla's first preference was noodles from the corner shop.
- dislike
means not liking something rather than liking it best
- aversion
a much stronger negative feeling
- indifference
shows that no special liking is felt either way
文法句型
have a preference for + noun
show a preference for + noun
first preference
用法筆記
Often appears with for when naming what someone likes more. Distinguish from noun/2, where preference is an advantage given by a rule, institution, or decision rather than a personal liking.
常見錯誤
2. an arrangement or decision that places one person, group, or thing ahead of othe
an arrangement or decision that places one person, group, or thing ahead of others
The school gives preference to children who live near campus.
pattern: give preference to + noun
In hiring, the factory gave preference to workers with repair skills.
At the border, families with babies were given preference.
The tax rule shows preference for small local shops.
When seats were limited, injured players got preference over guests.
- priority
often means being dealt with first, especially in time or order
- advantage
broader and not always created by an official rule
- favoritism
usually negative and suggests unfair special treatment
- equality
means people or groups are treated the same
- neutrality
suggests no side receives special support
文法句型
give preference to + noun
show preference for + noun
be given preference
用法筆記
Usually appears with give or show and with to, for, or over. Subject is often an institution, rule, or procedure; compare noun/1 for private likes and tastes.
常見錯誤
3. used in the phrase in preference to to mean instead of someone or something beca
used in the phrase in preference to to mean instead of someone or something because it seems better liked or more suitable
We bought the smaller tent in preference to the heavier one.
fixed phrase: in preference to + noun
Rosa walks to work in preference to waiting for the late bus.
fixed phrase: in preference to + -ing
The chef uses fresh lemons in preference to bottled juice.
For short trips, trains are often chosen in preference to planes.
- rather than
the most common modern equivalent
- instead of
more neutral and common in everyday speech
- in place of
slightly more formal and often focuses on replacement
文法句型
in preference to + noun
in preference to + -ing
用法筆記
Mostly found in the fixed phrase in preference to. Distinguish from noun/1, which names the liking itself; noun/3 focuses on the option chosen instead of another one.