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Raúl
Nothing or anything?
In Spain, we say, for example: "No quiero nada". "I don't want nothing" (nothing = nada)
In english I think is right to say: "I don't want anything" (anything = algo) or is correct "I don't want nothing"?
Is the same question: "There isn't anybody" or "There isn't nobody"?
18 Eki 2013 00:06
Yanıtlar · 3
3
If the statement is negative, use anything: I don't want anything.
If the statement is affirmative, use nothing. I want nothing.
I didn't see anybody.
I saw nobody.
There isn't anybody there.
There's nobody there.
http://learnenglish.britishcouncil.org/en/english-grammar/pronouns/indefinite-pronouns
18 Ekim 2013
2
The same goes for "there isn't nobody". It's a double negative.
18 Ekim 2013
2
I don't want nothing in English is a double negative. It's actually means that you do want something although people will know that you actually mean to say "I don't want anything". We try to avoid using double negatives in English.
18 Ekim 2013
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Raúl
Dil Becerileri
İngilizce, İspanyolca
Öğrenim Dili
İngilizce
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