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BerandaBuku Teks Bahasa InggrisPhase 1Evaluations (For vs. Of) - Judging the Situation vs. Judging the Person
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Evaluations (For vs. Of) - Judging the Situation vs. Judging the Person

Last updated: 6 Mei 2026

Imagine you just had a difficult conversation, telling a friend something they didn't want to hear.

Afterward, one friend texts you: It was brave of you to say that.[TRANS]

It feels good. A direct compliment to your character.

Then, another friend texts: That must have been a hard conversation for you to have.[TRANS]

It also feels good, but... different. It's empathy for the situation, not a judgment of you.

This subtle shift isn't an accident. It's a powerful social code controlled by two tiny words: for and of.

The Camera Lens Rule

Think of these words as the focus on a camera.

Of zooms in on the person. It makes a judgment about their internal character.

  • It was brave **of you**. (Your character is brave.)

For zooms out to the situation. It describes an external challenge someone is facing.

  • It was hard **for you**. (The situation was hard.)

Most textbooks miss this. They call it a grammar rule. We call it the difference between commenting on a person's soul and describing the world around them. Master it, and you'll unlock a new level of social precision.

It is important for you to finish this report.

Note:Focus: The situation. The `importance` here belongs to the report, not you. It's a statement about an external priority, not a judgment of your internal character.

It was generous of you to pay for dinner.

Note:Lens Focus: **You**. This statement isn't just about the act of paying; it's a direct judgment on your character. The generosity is presented as an innate quality *of you*. This is how you give a powerful, personal compliment.

The Feedback Switch: Person vs. Problem

Now, let's apply this code. Mastering this distinction is a superpower for giving feedback, setting boundaries, and showing true empathy.

Use for to focus on the problem. It separates the person from the issue, creating a safe, collaborative space. You're acknowledging an external challenge, not assigning internal blame.

  • A supportive boss might say: It's going to be challenging for you to lead this new team.[TRANS] The focus is on the challenging situation, not a weakness in the person.

Use of to focus on the person. It directly links an action to someone's character. This makes it perfect for powerful praise or sharp, personal criticism. It leaves no room for misinterpretation.

  • This is why a partner might say: It was selfish of you to ignore my call.[TRANS] The selfishness isn't an external circumstance; it's presented as a direct feature of you.

It was rude of him to check his phone during our conversation.

Note:Lens Focus: **Him**. This is a direct character judgment. The rudeness isn't an external factor; it's presented as a core part *of him*. The action—checking his phone—is simply proof of this internal trait. It’s personal, sharp, and points the finger directly at his character.

It's confusing for me to read this map.

Note:Lens Focus: **The situation**. By saying `for me`, you locate the confusion in the map, not in your own intelligence. Contrast this with a self-critical statement like `It was stupid of me to get lost.` Using `for` frames the issue as an external challenge, not an internal character flaw. You're describing the world, not judging the person in it.

The Accountability Switch

So, what's really happening here? You're choosing where to place accountability. Is the quality in the situation, or is it in the person?

For assigns accountability to the SITUATION.

  • It says a quality (like hard or important) belongs to the external task or context.
  • The person is simply the one experiencing it.
  • Use it to: Create empathy and focus on solving a shared problem.
    • It was hard **for you**. (The situation was the source of the hardness.)

Of assigns accountability to the PERSON.

  • It says a quality (like brave or rude) is an innate feature of their character.
  • The person is the source of the quality.
  • Use it to: Give powerful praise or direct, personal criticism.
    • It was brave **of you**. (You were the source of the bravery.)

This is the hidden engine of social judgment in English. For comments on the game; Of comments on the player.

Your choice sends a powerful signal. Use for to analyze the world around someone. Use of to analyze the person themselves. Mastering this switch doesn't just change your sentences—it changes how you relate to people.

Related Vocabulary

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Artikel ini dibuat oleh tim ahli bahasa dan pengajar bahasa Inggris kami yang berdedikasi. Tujuan kami adalah memecah tata bahasa yang kompleks menjadi penjelasan yang autentik dan mudah dipahami.