In American idiomatic English, “I have no money” and “I don’t have money” are equivalent. “I haven’t any money” is also correct, but more popular in other dialects of English (some British idiom?
Do you have any money or do you have money?
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.)
What is the difference between I have no money and I don’t have money?
I don’t have any money = I have no money. The meaning is different from the word on its own. ‘I have money’ means ‘I am rich. eg, if you are describing a person, you might say ‘he has money, so he doesn’t need to work’.
What to do when you don’t have any money?
31 Things To Do When You Have No Money
- Join a contest like a beauty contest or fitness contest.
- Baby-sit a child.
- Perform in the street.
- Join a carnival or any free festivals.
- Take a video to put on YouTube.
- Sell your old stuff.
- Build A Mobile App.
- Grab your camera and take photos around.
Is don’t have correct?
“Don’t have” is used when referring to yourself, or “THEY/WE/YOU don’t have”. “Doesn’t have” is used when referring to a SHE/HE, “she/he doesn’t have”.
Is much money correct?
‘How much money’ is the correct answer. Much is used for uncountable, singular nouns. Money cannot be counted but currency notes and coins can.
What’s it called when you don’t have any money?
penniless. adjective. someone who is penniless has no money.
How do you politely say you don’t have money?
Try the following:
- “I’m not really in a position to lend you money.”
- “I really don’t feel comfortable doing that.”
- “I’m sorry, but no.”
- “That’s really not feasible for me.”
Which is correct, ” I have no money ” or ” I don’t have money “?
In American idiomatic English, “I have no money” and “I don’t have money” are equivalent. “I haven’t any money” is also correct, but more popular in other dialects of English (some British idiom? someone help me out). Which one is correct, “I will/would do anything for you”? What’s the difference?
When do you Say I don’t have enough money?
“I haven’t enough money” is presently not so common in British English and now is getting used mainly formally. The more common way to express it in British English is “I haven’t got enough money.”
Why do people say they don’t have money?
8 Reasons Why You Don’t Have Money 1. Living with mommy 2. Economic illiteracy 3. The budget blockhead mindset 4. Politicians, the Easter Bunny and Santa Claus 5. Financial apathy 6. Entitlement issues 7. Poverty comparisons 8. Nine-to-five bitching
When to use not money in a sentence?
If we did use it, it would indicate that “not money” was an understandable noun phrase, and it could be used in a sentence like this: “Carl thought that his ‘not money’ would pay for his lemonade, but the little girl seller wisely refused it.”