simba0722
Do they mean the same thing? Does 1 sound natural? 1) He didn't count on one thing he left a witness behind. 2) He didn't anticipate one thing he left a witness behind.
31 de mar. de 2024 4:44
Respuestas · 4
1
You can't splice two independent clauses without punctuation or a conjunction. A colon will do the trick: "He didn't count on one thing: he left a witness behind." The meanings are similar. "Count on" is better for situations where an outcome is desired. For example, "I counted on my friend to help me."
31 de marzo de 2024
1
Natural are: The one thing he didn’t count on was leaving a witness behind. The one thing he didn’t count on was that he left a witness behind. ‘anticipate’ can replace ‘count on’ with a similar meaning.
31 de marzo de 2024
They are not totally natural. To make them natural you have to do what David K suggested. You say "the only thing' or "the one thing" at the beginning of the sentence.
1 de abril de 2024
¿No has encontrado las respuestas?
¡Escribe tus preguntas y deja que los hablantes nativos te ayuden!