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Anonymous Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

I am in a mood for eating out.

I am in a mood for eating out. VS. I am in the mood for eating out.

I am not in a good mood. VS. I am not in the good mood.

Do you native English speakers feel any difference between them respectively? Thank you so much as usual and have a good day.
  

Top answer

I am in the mood for eating out. I'm not in a good mood.

  • I am in the mood for eating out.
  • I'm not in a good mood.
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1 Answers
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I am in the mood for eating out.
I'm not in a good mood.

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