meaning - "Prerequisite for" vs. "prerequisite to"


When is it appropriate to use "prerequisite for" instead of "prerequisite to"? Does it depend on context, or is it a matter of style?


I googled the two phrases and found 4.5 million hits for "prerequisite for" and 3 million for "prerequisite to".



Answer



Looking at the Corpus of Contemporary American English, I get the following data. (The sentences use either the singular or the plural of the words.)


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Looking at the sentences included in the CoCA, it doesn't seem prerequisite is used with different meanings.



Does one seem like a prerequisite for the others?




Since primacy in undersea warfare is a prerequisite for other naval operations, priority must be given to expanding the navy's edge […].




According to Humboldt (Aksan, 1998), language is a prerequisite to the materialization of thought.




The prerequisites of these procedures are the reader's actual and fictional encyclopedias -- they are individually differentiated.




Thus, for Central Asia, two indispensable prerequisites of a future democratic evolution are the avoidance of either internal or interstate wars and the continuing external pressure for reform to reinforce the efforts of domestic reformers and to achieve a more broadly based, transparent, and legitimate basis for domestic security.




A prerequisite to fostering a full understanding of mentor programs is developing a definition that applies equally to the community college setting and business or pre-college programs.




The first prerequisite to thinking creatively is the desire to think imaginatively and a good place to start that process is by noticing creative images in magazines, cartoons, TV and movies.



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