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Anonymous Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

No can do

Hi,

In the sentence: "I asked him to give me a lift but he told me no can do" there is a clause "...he told me no can do" where me is an indirect object and no can do a direct one. My question is: can I say that the verb phrase "no can do" is an equivalent of a noun phrase and should be treated as such?

Thank you.
  

Top answer

he told me no can do" where me is an indirect object and no can do a direct one. My question is: can I say that the verb phrase "no can do" is an equivalent of a noun phrase and should be treated as such? You could look at it that way.

  • he told me no can do" where me is an indirect object and no can do a direct one.
  • My question is: can I say that the verb phrase "no can do" is an equivalent of a noun phrase and should be treated as such?
  • You could look at it that way.
  • But really, it should be written in quotes, ie .
  • .
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2 Answers
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Hi,

In the sentence: "I asked him to give me a lift but he told me no can do" there is a clause "...he told me no can do" where me is an indirect object and no can do a direct one. My question is: can I say that the verb phrase "no can do" is an equivalent of a noun phrase and should be treated a
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Thank you, Clive, for your useful reply.

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