The engine, the hood, the roof, the chassis, and not something replaceable as in something you can buy at an auto parts' store. I can write "what a cup is?" As question and i can write "what is a cup?" Are both forms grammatically correct The former one looking a bit off when used without context, but. 0 i'd say that something can be used in a more general way for when you are referring to any arbitrary number of things while anything would be better suited when the things are limited in numbers.
This is about something as in something something and what i perceive to be variations thereof (1) [word] something something [word] (2) [word] somethin' somethin' [word] (3) a little something something (4) a little somethin' somethin' (5) a little something of course it's about something that is not known My experience is that (1) and (2) are used when someone is trying to figure out. The construction was to help to do, but to help is used so often with an infinitive that speakers began to consider it something like a modal verb such as can, may etc and began dropping to. I have a question about the usages of to do something and to be doing something What's the difference between them
In the first, she emphasized the fact that she was going to the store In the 2nd, she emphasized something else by going to the store What that something else was isn't stated Hopefully, someone else can make sense of it. You dont feel pride for something unless that thing is capable of feeling pride itself and you are emulating that feeling due to empathy If you do something for person, you are serving the persons benefit
If you do something for object you are attempting to obtain the object. Do you want some help with the roof Makes it clear that the purpose of the help has something to do with the roof, but can't be read to specify where the help takes place, whereas do you want some help on the roof?
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