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Maxim
Are at all and whatsoever always interchangeable in negative and interrogative sentences?
Nov 14, 2021 1:36 PM
Answers · 1
1
Are "at all" and "whatsoever" always interchangeable in negative and interrogative sentences?
Make sure to use quotation marks in English as the sentence is much harder to understand without them. )
In short: yes.
A bit of their nuance explained:
First, you need to include the word "any/a/an" before the subject.
Both phrases are emphatic, meaning they express a greater deal of emotion. If you use them in a question, it could potentially become offensive by adding either phrase.
"Do you speak Russian?" Do you speak this language? simple, direct.
Ты говоришь по-русски?
"Do you speak *any* Russian at all?" can you speak even one word of this language?
"Do you speak *any* Russian whatsoever?" can you speak even one word of this language?
К сожалению, мне не ясно, как говорится на русском, но здесь нам (носители английского) хотелось бы выразить недоверие или недоумение с помощью этих фраз.
However, it would be polite if someone says "I had Russian parents" and you asked them, "Oh, do you speak any Russian?" and they might respond, "Sadly, I don't speak any Russian whatsoever."
Whereas, you can use them freely when describing yourself and it underlines that you are very unfamiliar with a subject.
I don't speak any French whatsoever/at all. Я даже ни слова не говорю по-французски
I don't know anything whatsoever about this subject. Я вообще ничего не знаю касательно этого предмета.
Hope that helps a little bit )))
November 14, 2021
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Maxim
Language Skills
English, French, Russian
Learning Language
English, French
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