Many people get confused about when to use ‘some’, ‘any’, ‘no’ and ‘none’. Can you fill in the blank? We don’t have _͟ coffee left.
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Answered by
6
We don't have ANY coffee left.
Answered by
3
Hye
Here's your answer:
We don’t have any coffee left.
Here's some explanation:
Here's your answer:
We don’t have any coffee left.
Here's some explanation:
ANY
You can use any car. (Whichever you wish.)
John was able to fix the car without any help.
– in a question: some.
Did you know any people there?
Do you have any sugar?
– in a negative sentence (not+any): no.
I don‘t know any Australian sportsmen.
We don‘t have any money on us.
no (must always be followed by a noun)
There is no bus stop here. (A bus stop is not here.)
She has no friends.
none (must not be followed by a noun)
They‘ve got none at the moment.
The recipe called for cinnamon, but there was none in the house.
Note:
we never place articles before these.some and any can stand independently.use of somebody, something, somewhere, anybody, anything, anywhere, nobody, nothing, nowhere is governed by the same rules.Similar questions