Happy New Year To You and Me
I hope that I will ask less English questions from now on.
An odd wish - good questions are part of good learning. Of course, there are times when you can answer your own questions. Incidentally, you'll raise fewer hackles if you observe the rule about less and fewer -on which the purists, I fear, are fighting a losing battle. Supermarkets will never put up signs saying '6 items or fewer', regardless of the 'disgusted' letters sent to the Daily Telegraph!
1) Any child can do it.
2) Any children can do it.
I think #1 is correct and
any child implies
every child. Is #2 never possible or they mean difference between them?
I wouldn't say never - a chef might say 'Add the shrimps (fresh, if possible, but any shrimps will do - tinned or frozen...)'. But in that context the plural is wrong.
3) Buy any book you want.
4) Buy any books you want.
I think both are correct and #3 implies that I am allowed to buy only one book.
4) Do you have any sister?
It might rarely fit in a situation involving half-sisters and step-sisters, or with lots of paralinguistic stuff (gestures and pauses, intonation and so on), making it mean 'Do you have anyone [to go to - ] a sister [perhaps]?' but 99.9% of the time it's wrong.
5) Do you have any sisters?
I think that both are okay and #4 implies "Do you have one sister?"
(In that case the question would be 'Do you have a sister?' and #5 implies "Do you have a few sisters?
So what I would like to know is if usage of
any is different in each sentence? Thank you so much as always and have a good and safe day.