“invisible to” VS “invisible for”












7
















  1. Nomination courses will be visible only for the enrolled participants.

  2. Nomination courses will be visible only to the enrolled participants.




When I want to suggest that nomination courses will only be made avalible to enrolled students, which preposition should I choose?










share|improve this question



























    7
















    1. Nomination courses will be visible only for the enrolled participants.

    2. Nomination courses will be visible only to the enrolled participants.




    When I want to suggest that nomination courses will only be made avalible to enrolled students, which preposition should I choose?










    share|improve this question

























      7












      7








      7









      1. Nomination courses will be visible only for the enrolled participants.

      2. Nomination courses will be visible only to the enrolled participants.




      When I want to suggest that nomination courses will only be made avalible to enrolled students, which preposition should I choose?










      share|improve this question















      1. Nomination courses will be visible only for the enrolled participants.

      2. Nomination courses will be visible only to the enrolled participants.




      When I want to suggest that nomination courses will only be made avalible to enrolled students, which preposition should I choose?







      prepositions






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Dec 2 at 6:45









      Mike Philip

      18312




      18312






















          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          2














          One group of native speakers might use to there, and another might use for, and a third group might use these prepositions interchangeably.



          Who is it visible to? and Who is it visible for? could both be paraphrased as "Who can see it?"



          Some speakers would recognize this distinction: visible to is a statement of the bald fact that something can be seen and visible for is a statement that the visibility is intentional. They were meant to be able to see it.



          Some speakers would not recognize that distinction.



          Since not all speakers use these prepositions in exactly the same manner, there can be some doubt about whether the visibility is intentional and you will have to rely upon context to make that determination.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 1




            This answer sounds confused and most of all confusing to beginners.
            – Gio
            Dec 2 at 13:57








          • 1




            @Gio: Feel free to write your own unconfused and unconfusing answer.
            – Tᴚoɯɐuo
            Dec 2 at 13:59



















          7














          "Visible to" seems to me the more idiomatic preposition when specifying who may see it.




          The total eclipse will only be visible to people in northern Europe, although other nearby countries will be able to see the partial eclipse.




          You can use "visible for" with things like time frame.




          The eclipse will only be visible for a short while, from around 8:20 to 8:50 in the morning.




          [Edit] I agree with Tᴚoɯɐuo's answer that "visible to" indicates who are able to see it while "visible for" indicates who are intended to see it. However the distinction is so slight that in order to make the point you should say something like "intended to be visible" or "meant to be visible"




          The study guide should only be visible to enrolled students.



          The study guide was meant to be visible only to enrolled students, but as we found out yesterday, it's actually visible to everyone.







          share|improve this answer























          • So visible for in my case sounds strange to native speakers, but it is still understandable?
            – Mike Philip
            Dec 2 at 7:21






          • 1




            @MikePhilip: It doesn’t even sound strange.
            – Ry-
            Dec 2 at 10:02










          • One could even use both, e.g. "The courses will be visible to all enrolled students for the entire registration period." In fact, the modifier "for <time period>" can be applied to almost any expression, even those that idiomatically use "for" for other purposes, too (e.g. "I've been looking for a present for my friend for her graduation for several months already, but I haven't found anything suitable").
            – Ilmari Karonen
            Dec 2 at 13:29










          • @MikePhilip I doesn't sound particularly strange it spoken English but the word order is convoluted in written English. Why not "Only enrolled participants can view nomination courses"?
            – alephzero
            Dec 2 at 14:00










          • @MikePhilip I have to disagree with the others, as it sounds strange to me. But perhaps that's only my personal opinion. I've edited my answer to signify.
            – Andrew
            Dec 2 at 15:42



















          2














          The more commonly used preposition to introduce an object after visible is “to”:



          Visible:




          PREP. to - Its contents were visible to all of them.




          (Online OXFORD Collocation Dictionary)






          share|improve this answer





















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            3 Answers
            3






            active

            oldest

            votes








            3 Answers
            3






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            2














            One group of native speakers might use to there, and another might use for, and a third group might use these prepositions interchangeably.



            Who is it visible to? and Who is it visible for? could both be paraphrased as "Who can see it?"



            Some speakers would recognize this distinction: visible to is a statement of the bald fact that something can be seen and visible for is a statement that the visibility is intentional. They were meant to be able to see it.



            Some speakers would not recognize that distinction.



            Since not all speakers use these prepositions in exactly the same manner, there can be some doubt about whether the visibility is intentional and you will have to rely upon context to make that determination.






            share|improve this answer



















            • 1




              This answer sounds confused and most of all confusing to beginners.
              – Gio
              Dec 2 at 13:57








            • 1




              @Gio: Feel free to write your own unconfused and unconfusing answer.
              – Tᴚoɯɐuo
              Dec 2 at 13:59
















            2














            One group of native speakers might use to there, and another might use for, and a third group might use these prepositions interchangeably.



            Who is it visible to? and Who is it visible for? could both be paraphrased as "Who can see it?"



            Some speakers would recognize this distinction: visible to is a statement of the bald fact that something can be seen and visible for is a statement that the visibility is intentional. They were meant to be able to see it.



            Some speakers would not recognize that distinction.



            Since not all speakers use these prepositions in exactly the same manner, there can be some doubt about whether the visibility is intentional and you will have to rely upon context to make that determination.






            share|improve this answer



















            • 1




              This answer sounds confused and most of all confusing to beginners.
              – Gio
              Dec 2 at 13:57








            • 1




              @Gio: Feel free to write your own unconfused and unconfusing answer.
              – Tᴚoɯɐuo
              Dec 2 at 13:59














            2












            2








            2






            One group of native speakers might use to there, and another might use for, and a third group might use these prepositions interchangeably.



            Who is it visible to? and Who is it visible for? could both be paraphrased as "Who can see it?"



            Some speakers would recognize this distinction: visible to is a statement of the bald fact that something can be seen and visible for is a statement that the visibility is intentional. They were meant to be able to see it.



            Some speakers would not recognize that distinction.



            Since not all speakers use these prepositions in exactly the same manner, there can be some doubt about whether the visibility is intentional and you will have to rely upon context to make that determination.






            share|improve this answer














            One group of native speakers might use to there, and another might use for, and a third group might use these prepositions interchangeably.



            Who is it visible to? and Who is it visible for? could both be paraphrased as "Who can see it?"



            Some speakers would recognize this distinction: visible to is a statement of the bald fact that something can be seen and visible for is a statement that the visibility is intentional. They were meant to be able to see it.



            Some speakers would not recognize that distinction.



            Since not all speakers use these prepositions in exactly the same manner, there can be some doubt about whether the visibility is intentional and you will have to rely upon context to make that determination.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Dec 2 at 10:15

























            answered Dec 2 at 10:07









            Tᴚoɯɐuo

            107k679172




            107k679172








            • 1




              This answer sounds confused and most of all confusing to beginners.
              – Gio
              Dec 2 at 13:57








            • 1




              @Gio: Feel free to write your own unconfused and unconfusing answer.
              – Tᴚoɯɐuo
              Dec 2 at 13:59














            • 1




              This answer sounds confused and most of all confusing to beginners.
              – Gio
              Dec 2 at 13:57








            • 1




              @Gio: Feel free to write your own unconfused and unconfusing answer.
              – Tᴚoɯɐuo
              Dec 2 at 13:59








            1




            1




            This answer sounds confused and most of all confusing to beginners.
            – Gio
            Dec 2 at 13:57






            This answer sounds confused and most of all confusing to beginners.
            – Gio
            Dec 2 at 13:57






            1




            1




            @Gio: Feel free to write your own unconfused and unconfusing answer.
            – Tᴚoɯɐuo
            Dec 2 at 13:59




            @Gio: Feel free to write your own unconfused and unconfusing answer.
            – Tᴚoɯɐuo
            Dec 2 at 13:59













            7














            "Visible to" seems to me the more idiomatic preposition when specifying who may see it.




            The total eclipse will only be visible to people in northern Europe, although other nearby countries will be able to see the partial eclipse.




            You can use "visible for" with things like time frame.




            The eclipse will only be visible for a short while, from around 8:20 to 8:50 in the morning.




            [Edit] I agree with Tᴚoɯɐuo's answer that "visible to" indicates who are able to see it while "visible for" indicates who are intended to see it. However the distinction is so slight that in order to make the point you should say something like "intended to be visible" or "meant to be visible"




            The study guide should only be visible to enrolled students.



            The study guide was meant to be visible only to enrolled students, but as we found out yesterday, it's actually visible to everyone.







            share|improve this answer























            • So visible for in my case sounds strange to native speakers, but it is still understandable?
              – Mike Philip
              Dec 2 at 7:21






            • 1




              @MikePhilip: It doesn’t even sound strange.
              – Ry-
              Dec 2 at 10:02










            • One could even use both, e.g. "The courses will be visible to all enrolled students for the entire registration period." In fact, the modifier "for <time period>" can be applied to almost any expression, even those that idiomatically use "for" for other purposes, too (e.g. "I've been looking for a present for my friend for her graduation for several months already, but I haven't found anything suitable").
              – Ilmari Karonen
              Dec 2 at 13:29










            • @MikePhilip I doesn't sound particularly strange it spoken English but the word order is convoluted in written English. Why not "Only enrolled participants can view nomination courses"?
              – alephzero
              Dec 2 at 14:00










            • @MikePhilip I have to disagree with the others, as it sounds strange to me. But perhaps that's only my personal opinion. I've edited my answer to signify.
              – Andrew
              Dec 2 at 15:42
















            7














            "Visible to" seems to me the more idiomatic preposition when specifying who may see it.




            The total eclipse will only be visible to people in northern Europe, although other nearby countries will be able to see the partial eclipse.




            You can use "visible for" with things like time frame.




            The eclipse will only be visible for a short while, from around 8:20 to 8:50 in the morning.




            [Edit] I agree with Tᴚoɯɐuo's answer that "visible to" indicates who are able to see it while "visible for" indicates who are intended to see it. However the distinction is so slight that in order to make the point you should say something like "intended to be visible" or "meant to be visible"




            The study guide should only be visible to enrolled students.



            The study guide was meant to be visible only to enrolled students, but as we found out yesterday, it's actually visible to everyone.







            share|improve this answer























            • So visible for in my case sounds strange to native speakers, but it is still understandable?
              – Mike Philip
              Dec 2 at 7:21






            • 1




              @MikePhilip: It doesn’t even sound strange.
              – Ry-
              Dec 2 at 10:02










            • One could even use both, e.g. "The courses will be visible to all enrolled students for the entire registration period." In fact, the modifier "for <time period>" can be applied to almost any expression, even those that idiomatically use "for" for other purposes, too (e.g. "I've been looking for a present for my friend for her graduation for several months already, but I haven't found anything suitable").
              – Ilmari Karonen
              Dec 2 at 13:29










            • @MikePhilip I doesn't sound particularly strange it spoken English but the word order is convoluted in written English. Why not "Only enrolled participants can view nomination courses"?
              – alephzero
              Dec 2 at 14:00










            • @MikePhilip I have to disagree with the others, as it sounds strange to me. But perhaps that's only my personal opinion. I've edited my answer to signify.
              – Andrew
              Dec 2 at 15:42














            7












            7








            7






            "Visible to" seems to me the more idiomatic preposition when specifying who may see it.




            The total eclipse will only be visible to people in northern Europe, although other nearby countries will be able to see the partial eclipse.




            You can use "visible for" with things like time frame.




            The eclipse will only be visible for a short while, from around 8:20 to 8:50 in the morning.




            [Edit] I agree with Tᴚoɯɐuo's answer that "visible to" indicates who are able to see it while "visible for" indicates who are intended to see it. However the distinction is so slight that in order to make the point you should say something like "intended to be visible" or "meant to be visible"




            The study guide should only be visible to enrolled students.



            The study guide was meant to be visible only to enrolled students, but as we found out yesterday, it's actually visible to everyone.







            share|improve this answer














            "Visible to" seems to me the more idiomatic preposition when specifying who may see it.




            The total eclipse will only be visible to people in northern Europe, although other nearby countries will be able to see the partial eclipse.




            You can use "visible for" with things like time frame.




            The eclipse will only be visible for a short while, from around 8:20 to 8:50 in the morning.




            [Edit] I agree with Tᴚoɯɐuo's answer that "visible to" indicates who are able to see it while "visible for" indicates who are intended to see it. However the distinction is so slight that in order to make the point you should say something like "intended to be visible" or "meant to be visible"




            The study guide should only be visible to enrolled students.



            The study guide was meant to be visible only to enrolled students, but as we found out yesterday, it's actually visible to everyone.








            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Dec 2 at 15:56

























            answered Dec 2 at 7:07









            Andrew

            65.5k674145




            65.5k674145












            • So visible for in my case sounds strange to native speakers, but it is still understandable?
              – Mike Philip
              Dec 2 at 7:21






            • 1




              @MikePhilip: It doesn’t even sound strange.
              – Ry-
              Dec 2 at 10:02










            • One could even use both, e.g. "The courses will be visible to all enrolled students for the entire registration period." In fact, the modifier "for <time period>" can be applied to almost any expression, even those that idiomatically use "for" for other purposes, too (e.g. "I've been looking for a present for my friend for her graduation for several months already, but I haven't found anything suitable").
              – Ilmari Karonen
              Dec 2 at 13:29










            • @MikePhilip I doesn't sound particularly strange it spoken English but the word order is convoluted in written English. Why not "Only enrolled participants can view nomination courses"?
              – alephzero
              Dec 2 at 14:00










            • @MikePhilip I have to disagree with the others, as it sounds strange to me. But perhaps that's only my personal opinion. I've edited my answer to signify.
              – Andrew
              Dec 2 at 15:42


















            • So visible for in my case sounds strange to native speakers, but it is still understandable?
              – Mike Philip
              Dec 2 at 7:21






            • 1




              @MikePhilip: It doesn’t even sound strange.
              – Ry-
              Dec 2 at 10:02










            • One could even use both, e.g. "The courses will be visible to all enrolled students for the entire registration period." In fact, the modifier "for <time period>" can be applied to almost any expression, even those that idiomatically use "for" for other purposes, too (e.g. "I've been looking for a present for my friend for her graduation for several months already, but I haven't found anything suitable").
              – Ilmari Karonen
              Dec 2 at 13:29










            • @MikePhilip I doesn't sound particularly strange it spoken English but the word order is convoluted in written English. Why not "Only enrolled participants can view nomination courses"?
              – alephzero
              Dec 2 at 14:00










            • @MikePhilip I have to disagree with the others, as it sounds strange to me. But perhaps that's only my personal opinion. I've edited my answer to signify.
              – Andrew
              Dec 2 at 15:42
















            So visible for in my case sounds strange to native speakers, but it is still understandable?
            – Mike Philip
            Dec 2 at 7:21




            So visible for in my case sounds strange to native speakers, but it is still understandable?
            – Mike Philip
            Dec 2 at 7:21




            1




            1




            @MikePhilip: It doesn’t even sound strange.
            – Ry-
            Dec 2 at 10:02




            @MikePhilip: It doesn’t even sound strange.
            – Ry-
            Dec 2 at 10:02












            One could even use both, e.g. "The courses will be visible to all enrolled students for the entire registration period." In fact, the modifier "for <time period>" can be applied to almost any expression, even those that idiomatically use "for" for other purposes, too (e.g. "I've been looking for a present for my friend for her graduation for several months already, but I haven't found anything suitable").
            – Ilmari Karonen
            Dec 2 at 13:29




            One could even use both, e.g. "The courses will be visible to all enrolled students for the entire registration period." In fact, the modifier "for <time period>" can be applied to almost any expression, even those that idiomatically use "for" for other purposes, too (e.g. "I've been looking for a present for my friend for her graduation for several months already, but I haven't found anything suitable").
            – Ilmari Karonen
            Dec 2 at 13:29












            @MikePhilip I doesn't sound particularly strange it spoken English but the word order is convoluted in written English. Why not "Only enrolled participants can view nomination courses"?
            – alephzero
            Dec 2 at 14:00




            @MikePhilip I doesn't sound particularly strange it spoken English but the word order is convoluted in written English. Why not "Only enrolled participants can view nomination courses"?
            – alephzero
            Dec 2 at 14:00












            @MikePhilip I have to disagree with the others, as it sounds strange to me. But perhaps that's only my personal opinion. I've edited my answer to signify.
            – Andrew
            Dec 2 at 15:42




            @MikePhilip I have to disagree with the others, as it sounds strange to me. But perhaps that's only my personal opinion. I've edited my answer to signify.
            – Andrew
            Dec 2 at 15:42











            2














            The more commonly used preposition to introduce an object after visible is “to”:



            Visible:




            PREP. to - Its contents were visible to all of them.




            (Online OXFORD Collocation Dictionary)






            share|improve this answer


























              2














              The more commonly used preposition to introduce an object after visible is “to”:



              Visible:




              PREP. to - Its contents were visible to all of them.




              (Online OXFORD Collocation Dictionary)






              share|improve this answer
























                2












                2








                2






                The more commonly used preposition to introduce an object after visible is “to”:



                Visible:




                PREP. to - Its contents were visible to all of them.




                (Online OXFORD Collocation Dictionary)






                share|improve this answer












                The more commonly used preposition to introduce an object after visible is “to”:



                Visible:




                PREP. to - Its contents were visible to all of them.




                (Online OXFORD Collocation Dictionary)







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Dec 2 at 7:08









                user070221

                4,2571729




                4,2571729






























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