Выбрать из множества учителей по предмету английский...
Anna
By whatever means vs by all means
Could anyone explain me please the difference between "by whatever means" and "by all means"( if it isn't used to grant a permission)? Which one is more appropriate in this sentence? " He was determined to get money by whatever/all means".
12 нояб. 2019 г., 13:59
Ответы · 5
2
You are not comparing 'like with like'. One is a fixed phrase while the other is just three words.
"By all means" is a fixed phrase. I can't think of a situation where you would use this response and not be granting permission of some kind. As a set expression, its function is equivalent to saying 'Please do', 'Go ahead', 'No problem' and so on.
'By whatever means' is not really a phrase at all: it's just three words - a preposition, a determiner and a noun - that happen to occur together in a sentence.
For example, you could say, "He was determined to get money by whatever means he could", "He was determined to get money by whatever means were available to him". The word 'whatever' has the same meaning as 'any' in this context: you could just as well say "He was determined to get money by any means he could", and the meaning would be the same. You cannot use 'all means' in this sentence.
12 ноября 2019 г.
The correct way of saying it is “by whatever means”.
12 ноября 2019 г.
Все еще не нашли ответы?
Напишите свои вопросы, и пусть вам помогут носители языка!
Anna
Языковые навыки
английский, французский, русский
Изучаемый язык
английский, французский, русский
Статьи, которые тебе могут быть интересны

Same Word, Different Meaning: American, British, and South African English
10 нравится · 7 Комментариев

How to Sound Confident in English (Even When You’re Nervous)
12 нравится · 9 Комментариев

Marketing Vocabulary and Phrases for Business English Learners
8 нравится · 2 Комментариев
Еще статьи