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The documents contain information of great importance. The intercepted information was of little merit. This doesn't speak about the subject, the actual content of the information but about the information itself: 'of questionable value', 'of no interest to me', 'of utmost urgency'. This is a rather formal, official form.
Information is a non-countable noun (you can't have 4 informations), so it is neither singular nor plural ...
The phrase "information for" can be used as well, but that generally means something different, and would be structured accordingly. – J.R. ♦ Commented Sep 17, 2015 at 15:19
With information, in the context you gave, of can only indicate ownership/possession. It is otherwise incorrect. Information of your family. Means information belonging to your family. To say information relating to something, we can use about or on. For example: My family has a history of diabetes. This is information on my family or about my ...
When saying For your information, you are giving someone some information to 'keep' with their records, either physical or mental, so to speak. For your kind information makes it sound like you want to file it away with the kind information they own! I do not believe For your information is a sentence which can be enhanced with a word such as kind.
All 1) the information I get from fish is used to manage 2) the oceans better. I want to know how the two 'the' worked in the sentences. How about the following sentence? All information I get from fish is used to manage oceans better. Is the sentence completely wrong, or is this one different from the previous one.
I'm thinking of the following: info-packed / information-packed knowledge-packed I guess these are grammatically acceptable but probably there are better choices.
There is another correction for you. Since "information" is an uncountable noun, it has no plural form. When you are using 'commas' with list of words, just use 'and' in between to separate the last two words. You can use 'commas' in between to separate other words . Finally, see your sentence below after fixing grammar issues
large information from the data; I have never heard information described as "large." lots of information from the data; This could be fine - depending on the verb that comes before lots. There is [lots / a lot] of information in the data. I extracted [lots / a lot] of information from the data.
For your information (frequently abbreviated FYI) For your situational awareness (not as common, may be abbreviated FYSA) For reference; For future reference; For your information in the workplace implies that no action is required on the recipient’s part—commonly used in unsolicited communication. In less formal settings, the same phrase ...