"Approve/disapprove" in a sentence

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Rachel Adams

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Hello.

Is "of" optional in the first sentence? It is in the second, if I am not mistaken.

1. "The church doesn't approve of surrogacy. Despite the fact that it gives couples a chance to have a child."

2. "The church disapprove of surrogacy despite the fact that it gives couples a chance to have a child."
 
Hello.

Is "of" optional in the first sentence? It is in the second, if I am not mistaken.

1. "The church doesn't approve of surrogacy no full stop here despite the fact that it gives couples a chance to have a child."

2. "The church disapproves of surrogacy despite the fact that it gives couples a chance to have a child."

"of" is required in both. In such a context, we "approve of something" or "disapprove of something". The other meaning of "approve" has a different antonym - "unapprove".
 
Hello.

Is "of" optional in the first sentence? It is in the second, if I am not mistaken.

1. "The church doesn't approve of surrogacy despite the fact that it gives couples a chance to have a child."

2. "The church disapproves of surrogacy despite the fact that it gives couples a chance to have a child."
Of is required in both.

(Cross-post.)
 
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That's a different usage.
 
"A solid majority disapproves the way the president is handling the controversy" (taken from that link and which says it's North American English) does not work in BrE.
 
"A solid majority disapproves the way the president is handling the controversy" (taken from that link and which says it's North American English) does not work in BrE.
But since the idea is the same that's why I thought I could omit "of" in "disapprove".
 
"A solid majority disapproves the way the president is handling the controversy" (taken from that link and which says it's North American English) does not work in BrE.
It doesn't work at my house, either. It should be disapproves of.

You can approve something (My vacation request was approved), but you can't disapprove something.
 
"A solid majority disapproves the way the president is handling the controversy" (taken from that link and which says it's North American English) does not work in BrE.
Nor does it in American English. We disapprove of the way he's handling it.
 
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