English, asked by Indianwarrior222, 9 months ago

do you want ---- help from me (any/many/ some)​

Answers

Answered by navyatambi
2

Answer:

do you want some help from me

Answered by varshika1664
1

Answer:

We will use some as the correct answer for the given blank in the statement as it fits perfectly with the sentence. Thus, the correct answer would be 'do you want some help from me?'

Explanation:

Some may be used withinside the following ways:

  • As a pronoun - (with out a following noun) 1)The cake’s wonderful. Won’t you've got some? 2)Many fought and a some died withinside the struggle. (observed via way of means of ‘of’). 1)Some of the apples had been rotten.
  • As a determiner - (observed via way of means of an uncountable noun): 1)I’ll make some coffee. (observed via way of means of a plural noun): 1)She added me some flowers. (observed via way of means of a unique countable noun): 1)She married some man she met at the boat.
  • As an adverb - (observed via way of means of a number): 1)The automobile stopped some twenty-5 yards from wherein we had been standing. (after a verb in American English): 1)His circumstance had worsened some.
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