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I understand the phrases made of and made from from the questions and answers provided here and here.
Yet I came across three more phrases: made out of, made of, and made with which I think are related to the subject in question.
Would you please help me understand how to differentiate these phrases too? And how is their usage?
My confusion is this: should we say that this object is made with iron, glass, wood, etc. or this object is made from (out of) iron, glass, wood, etc. that is when there are many components that are used to make an object. – Lucian Sava – 2014-05-30T09:17:36.597
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Of course, if the new thing keeps its original thing (ingredient?) intact, it's made of. *The house is made of bricks.** If the original material loses its original shape, texture or form, it's from. *A paper is made from trees.* Good read here on BBC http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/radio/specials/1837_aae/page29.shtml So, in your case where multiple things are used to make something, it's made OF because the metals remain intact. http://answers.ask.com/business/constructions_and_materials/what_is_stainless_steel_made_of
– Maulik V – 2014-05-30T09:24:15.813As you can see on only this page: http://indianfood.about.com/od/sweetsanddesserts/tp/milkdesserts.htm I found to be used all: with, from, of. Maybe it doesn’t matter what preposition we use?
– Lucian Sava – 2014-05-30T09:38:57.7571@LucianSava In food (dishes) it talks about the ingredients used. With is okay that way. But then let it make easy for you. Ask yourself, can you identify the fruit in the dish as it is in its original form? If the answer is yes then go for of and if you cannot make it out by its appearance (and not taste), it's from. :) – Maulik V – 2014-05-30T09:45:51.393