0
Anonymous Posted 15 years ago
Vocabulary

Make necessary corrections

he can be able to do the sum
  

Top answer

I'm not sure I understand your intent. ] At any rate, can = is/are able, so you don't use both together.

  • I'm not sure I understand your intent.
  • ] At any rate, can = is/are able, so you don't use both together.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

3 Answers
0
I'm not sure I understand your intent.

He can do the addition [?]

He will be able to...[?]

At any rate, can = is/are able, so you don't use both together.
0
Hi,

'can be able' is an odd phrase.

I think you mean this.
eg He is able to do the sum.
eg He can do the sum.

Clive
0
Anonymoushe can be able to do the sum
I'm not sure what you are tyring to say. Maybe one of these:

He can do the sum.
He is able to do the sum.
He will be able to do the sum.
He can learn how to do the sum.

Related Questions