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Felixxx Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

Do not have \ have not ?

The passages do not have any intention to give their seat to the older people.

The passages have not any intention to give their seat to the older people.

Which are correct? I don't know what is the distinction between them.

Thanks
  

Top answer

Felixxx Which are correct? Neither; I presume you mean 'passengers'. This is what you intend: The passengers do not have any intention of giving their seats to older people.

  • Felixxx Which are correct?
  • Neither; I presume you mean 'passengers'.
  • This is what you intend: The passengers do not have any intention of giving their seats to older people.
  • The passengers have no intention of giving their seats to older people.
  • The passengers do not intend to give their seats to older people.
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5 Answers
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FelixxxWhich are correct?
Neither; I presume you mean 'passengers'. This is what you intend:

The passengers do not have any intention of giving their seats to older people.
The passengers have no intention of giving their seats to older people.
The passengers do not intend to give their seats to older people.

You
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Thanks ! What if the sentence like this:
The passengers have not any intention of giving their seats to the older people.
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Please fix your sentence. You have not improved it a bit; in fact, you seem not to have read my post at all.
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FelixxxSorry! Fixed it!
Then it is still unacceptable, sorry. See my initial comment.

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