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Anonymous Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

unable inability

His inability to control. He is unable to control both can we use interchangeably?
  

Top answer

" appears to be a meaningless sequence of words. Please try to separate the words you are asking about from the words of your question more clearly. You can use quotation marks or italics to do this, as I have done below.

  • " appears to be a meaningless sequence of words.
  • Please try to separate the words you are asking about from the words of your question more clearly.
  • You can use quotation marks or italics to do this, as I have done below.
  • I suppose that you are asking about "His inability to control" and "He is unable to control", though I am unsure whether the word "both" is supposed to be included.
  • In any case, these are grammatically quite different.
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1 Answers
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At first glance, "He is unable to control both can we use interchangeably?" appears to be a meaningless sequence of words. Please try to separate the words you are asking about from the words of your question more clearly. You can use quotation marks or italics to do this, as I have done below.

I suppose that you are asking about "His inability to control" and "He is unable to control", t

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