Grammar question.

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"Missed off of" or "Missed off from".

e.g.

"The biggest upside is that items aren't missed off of our customer's bills."
"The biggest upside is that items aren't missed off from our customer's bills."

Go.
 
Both are grammatically correct whether they are suitable is a different question! They are quite unusual ways of saying what you are trying to say.
 
"That items aren't missed off of our customer's bills the biggest upside is."

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Neither, sounds like awful grammar, even if they're technically "correct", "off of" nearly always sounds wrong anyway.

"The biggest upside is that items aren't missing from our customers' bills."

I'd suggest that is the best alternative without changing too much.
 
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Not looking for alternatives, as i'm sure there are plenty, just looking for the general consensus as to which people would choose :)

Why would you not look for an alternative when both of your suggestions are terribly constructed american sentences but you were given a very well constructed english sentence? :confused:
 
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