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Nicetomeetyou Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

A plan or plans?

I’ve wanted to visit the gallery, but I am too busy to even make plans/a plan to go there.

Which would you use, plans or a plan, for the the underlined part? Are both answers correct?

  

Top answer

nicetomeetyou Which would you use, plans or a plan Both are correct. '

  • nicetomeetyou Which would you use, plans or a plan Both are correct.
  • '
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2 Answers
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nicetomeetyouWhich would you use, plans or a plan

Both are correct.

My guess is that 'plans' is probably more common but I would be surprised if anyone had a problem with 'a plan.'

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"Make a plan" makes it sound like you are preparing a military operation or something, like you need a plan. It sounds literal. I would never put it that way. "Make plans" is the normal way of saying that.

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