Doubts
I know that we use 'do' like auxiliary verb for negative sentences.
For instance:
I don't want more pills.
But, can we tell any difference in this statement?
I want no more pills.
Is it correct?
No real difference, you're correct. The 2nd sounds a little more definitive, though.
I believe 'no' is used differently in English than in Spanish (I could be wrong), in that, for instance, saying "I'm no teacher" is a little more intense than saying "I am not a teacher".
Typically, 'no' means 'not any', 'not at all', whereas 'not' means 'for the most part not'.
Doubts
I know that we use 'do' like auxiliary verb for negative sentences.
For instance:
I don't want more pills.
But, can we tell say?
I want no more pills.
Is it correct?
----------------
I think yes its correct.
Doubts
I know that we use 'do' like auxiliary verb for negative sentences.
For instance:
I don't want more pills.
But, can we say tell?
I want no more pills. This is considered uneducated English, spoken by the lower classes. The correct and formal way is, "I do not want any more pills".
Is it correct?


