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Anonymous Posted 12 years ago
Vocabulary

a plan or plans

I want to say " I will be hanging out with my friends on this coming Saturday". Which one is correct when I have to rephrase this, I have a plan with my friends or I have plans with my friends? If I use " a plan" in this context, can it be a different meaning?
  

Top answer

Anonymous I have plans with my friends This is the usual choice of words for the context you described. Anonymous If I use " a plan" in this context, can it be a different meaning? No.

  • Anonymous I have plans with my friends This is the usual choice of words for the context you described.
  • Anonymous If I use " a plan" in this context, can it be a different meaning?
  • No.
  • It will just sound wrong.
  • CJ
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2 Answers
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AnonymousI have plans with my friends
This is the usual choice of words for the context you described.
AnonymousIf I use " a plan" in this context, can it be a different meaning?
No. It will just sound wrong.

CJ
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Idiomatically, 'hanging out' usually suggests 'no plans',
eg
A: Do you have any plans for Saturday?
B: No. I'll just be hanging out with my friends.

Clive

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