0
Anonymous Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

of / for

I have a plan to go abroad.
I have a plan of going abroad.
Any differences between them ?
Thanks.
  

Top answer

I have a plan to go abroad. -Good. I have a plan of going abroad.

  • I have a plan to go abroad.
  • -Good.
  • I have a plan of going abroad.
  • -Incorrect.
  • I have a plan for going abroad.
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.

4 Answers
0
I have a plan to go abroad. -Good.
I have a plan of going abroad. -Incorrect.
I have a plan for going abroad. -Good, but changes the meaning.
0
I have plans to go abroad. I plan to go abroad. Both of these sound a little more natural to me.
0
Sir, Would it be correct if we said, "I have planned to go abroad."? Also, would there be any difference between "I have planned to go abroad." and "I have plans to go abroad/I plan to go abroad."?

Does saying "I have planned to go abroad" mean that I've decided or made up my mind to abroad?, and If I said "I plan to go abroad.", would it mean that
0
Laborious"I have planned to go abroad."? Also, would there be any difference between "I have planned to go abroad." and "I have plans to go abroad/I plan to go abroad."?
I have planned to go abroad sounds more natural with some additional information, such as for several months.

Related Questions