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Mariott Posted 16 years ago
Grammar

"of no problem'?

It is of no problem.

Does this make sense?
Or should I say it has no problem instead?

Thanks in advance!
  

Top answer

Usually , that's no problem/not a problem. But it's of no use/consequence/importance (to me, us, you etc) If you can provide a broder context we could be more specific.

  • Usually , that's no problem/not a problem.
  • But it's of no use/consequence/importance (to me, us, you etc) If you can provide a broder context we could be more specific.
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2 Answers
0
Usually , that's no problem/not a problem.

But it's of no use/consequence/importance (to me, us, you etc)

If you can provide a broder context we could be more specific.

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