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Roky0071 Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

The car won't start vs the car is not starting

I give few examples below.

a. The car won't start.

b. The car is not starting.

c. The car does not want to start.

d. The car is not going to start.

1. Do the examples above express the same meaning? If not, which example is meaningful and used in English speech? and in which situations can I use the example?

  

Top answer

At the mechanics: Mechanic: What's the problem? Me: The car won't start. Mechanic: I removed the battery.

  • At the mechanics: Mechanic: What's the problem?
  • Me: The car won't start.
  • Mechanic: I removed the battery.
  • The car is not going to start.
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1 Answers
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At the mechanics:

Mechanic: What's the problem?
Me: The car won't start.


Mechanic: I removed the battery. The car is not going to start.

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