... since then on

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duiter

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Dear all,

Is on at at the following sentence an optional word ?
Can I delete it ?

The number of shoppers plunged by up to 23 per cent since then on

Many thanks
 
Dear all,

Is on at at the following sentence an optional word ?
Can I delete it ?
You should delete it. But you'd have to use the present perfect:
The number of shoppers has plunged by up to 23 per cent since then.

Many thanks
"Since then on" is not an English phrase that I've ever come across.
 
*Not a Teacher*

" The number of shoppers has plunged by up to 23 percent since then. "

-- "Since then on" doesn't make much sense at the end of that sentence.
 
No, it's wrong. It should read:

The number of shoppers plunged by up to 23 per cent from then on. Or:The number of shoppers has plunged by up to 23 per cent since then.

It's still a lttle odd with the 'up to'. Either it plunged by 23% or it didn't.

ps. You are too fast for me, SlickVic.
 
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No, it's wrong. It should read:

The number of shoppers plunged by up to 23 per cent from then on. Or:The number of shoppers has plunged by up to 23 per cent since then.

It's still a lttle odd with the 'up to'. Either it plunged by 23% or it didn't.
No, it keeps plunging. Once it plunged to 23%. So it did. Other plunges were less. So it has plunged by up to 23%.
(I agree that it's probably a wrong interpretation of what happened though.)
 
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