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.
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 marca 2024
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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 marca 2024
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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 kwietnia 2024
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