Have you money or do you have money?
Table of Contents
- 1 Have you money or do you have money?
- 2 Do you have money or any money?
- 3 Do you have any money grammar?
- 4 Do you have any money on you or with you?
- 5 What does it mean to have no money?
- 6 What does you have money on you mean?
- 7 Is it correct to say I have a few dollars?
- 8 What is the difference between “a little money” and “few dollars”?
Have you money or do you have money?
Both constructions are grammatically correct. But “Do you have money?” is far more commonly used than “Have you money?”
Do you have money or any money?
The “usual” rule is “some” in affirmative sentences, “any” in interrogative and negative sentences. But this “rule” can be broken. “Do you have any money?” normal, neutral, question. “Do you have some money?” hoping for the answer “yes”.
Do you have any money meaning?
if you are saying do you have some money means you are hoping that you will get some money and if you will say do you have any money means you are in your normal tone asking for money whether you have or not.
Do you have money on you or with you?
“On” means on your body at this moment (e.g. in your pocket). “With” means in your possession, but perhaps not on your body (e.g. in a briefcase, in the car, at the hotel…)
Do you have any money grammar?
When talking about quantity, or how much there is of something, the two most important words are any and some. “Any” is generally used to ask if there is more than one of something. This kind of question is a “yes no” question, meaning that the answer is “yes” or “no”: “Do you have any money?” (No, I don’t.)
Do you have any money on you or with you?
Do you have any or do you have some?
The Main Difference Between SOME and ANY As a general rule, we use ‘some’ for affirmative sentences, and ‘any’ for questions or negative sentences. Usually, both ‘some’ and ‘any’ can only be used with countable plural nouns or uncountable nouns. “I don’t have any questions.” “Do you have any questions?”
What is it called when you dont have money?
penniless. adjective. someone who is penniless has no money.
What does it mean to have no money?
: having very little or no money usually habitually : penniless.
What does you have money on you mean?
DEFINITIONS1. used for saying that you think a particular person is going to do or achieve something, or that a particular thing is going to happen.
What does have cash on me mean?
/kæʃ/ to get money or another advantage from an event or situation, often in an unfair way: Her family have been accused of cashing in on her death. Advantage and disadvantage.
When do you use the word ‘money’?
It tends to occur when the reference is to discrete sums of money, obtained from a particular source or allocated to a particular cause. There are occasions when ‘money’ is plural. The spelling in these instance can be moneys or, more commonly, monies:
Is it correct to say I have a few dollars?
After “a few” you need a plural. You could say “I still have a few dollars.” That would be correct (as long as you really have a few dollars). “A few money” is not correct (no matter how much money you have). After “a little” you need a mass noun.
What is the difference between “a little money” and “few dollars”?
“A little money” is correct, but “few” is not. Money is a collective noun (like sand, dirt, sugar) as opposed to “dollars” or coins” or 25-cent pieces” or “grains of sand”; the adjective “few” is only used when the noun modified can be specifically enumerated (e.g., two dollars, 73 dollars, 541 dollars, etc.).
Is it correct to say I don’t have any money?
“I don’t have money” (or more likely “I don’t have any money” or “I don’t have enough money”) is what you’ll almost always hear in conversation. “I haven’t money” seems very base, as in that sentence lacks structure, “I don’t have money” is the sample that I vote for.