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Rommel Posted 10 years ago
Vocabulary

‘No doubt’ or ‘without doubt’?

Should I say ‘no doubt’ or ‘without doubt’?

Athenie has attended too many workshops on journalism. (No doubt, without doubt), she has become familiar with the mechanics of newswriting.
  

Top answer

Should I say ‘no doubt’ or ‘without doubt’? Use the latter.

  • Should I say ‘no doubt’ or ‘without doubt’?
  • Use the latter.
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2 Answers
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Should I say ‘no doubt’ or ‘without doubt’? Use the latter.
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Without doubt, she has become familiar with the mechanics of newswriting. If the sentence begins with an adverb phrase, a comma is used.

(There is ) no doubt (that) she has become familiar with the mechanics of newswriting. No comma.

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