from the following sentence which is better to use i wont go i dont go
N navaskdlr New member Joined Mar 7, 2013 Member Type Student or Learner Native Language Malayalam Home Country India Current Location India Mar 7, 2013 #1 from the following sentence which is better to use i wont go i dont go
Raymott VIP Member Joined Jun 29, 2008 Member Type Academic Native Language English Home Country Australia Current Location Australia Mar 7, 2013 #2 navaskdlr said: from the following sentence which is better to use I won't go. I don't go. Click to expand... Now that I've fixed them, they are both good sentences. Which one you choose depends on what you want to say.
navaskdlr said: from the following sentence which is better to use I won't go. I don't go. Click to expand... Now that I've fixed them, they are both good sentences. Which one you choose depends on what you want to say.
W Winwin2011 Senior Member Joined Aug 4, 2011 Member Type Interested in Language Native Language Chinese Home Country Hong Kong Current Location Hong Kong Mar 7, 2013 #3 I wonder which of the following sentence is natural. 1.The theme park is too crowded on Sundays. We don't go there on Sundays. 2.The theme park is too crowded on Sundays. We won't go there on Sundays. Thanks.
I wonder which of the following sentence is natural. 1.The theme park is too crowded on Sundays. We don't go there on Sundays. 2.The theme park is too crowded on Sundays. We won't go there on Sundays. Thanks.
emsr2d2 Moderator Staff member Joined Jul 28, 2009 Member Type English Teacher Native Language British English Home Country UK Current Location UK Mar 7, 2013 #4 Winwin2011 said: I wonder which of the following sentences is natural. 1.The theme park is too crowded on Sundays. We don't go there on Sundays. 2.The theme park is too crowded on Sundays. We won't go there on Sundays. Thanks. Click to expand... Did you wonder that before navaskdlr started this thread? ;-)
Winwin2011 said: I wonder which of the following sentences is natural. 1.The theme park is too crowded on Sundays. We don't go there on Sundays. 2.The theme park is too crowded on Sundays. We won't go there on Sundays. Thanks. Click to expand... Did you wonder that before navaskdlr started this thread? ;-)
W Winwin2011 Senior Member Joined Aug 4, 2011 Member Type Interested in Language Native Language Chinese Home Country Hong Kong Current Location Hong Kong Mar 7, 2013 #5 emsr2d2 said: Did you wonder that before navaskdlr started this thread? ;-) Click to expand... Hi ems. I just wonder the difference between "won't go" and " don't go" If a tourist wants to go the theme park on sundays. Is it natural for me to say as follows? The theme park is too crowded on Sundays. We don't go there on Sundays.(We means local people) Thanks. Last edited: Mar 7, 2013
emsr2d2 said: Did you wonder that before navaskdlr started this thread? ;-) Click to expand... Hi ems. I just wonder the difference between "won't go" and " don't go" If a tourist wants to go the theme park on sundays. Is it natural for me to say as follows? The theme park is too crowded on Sundays. We don't go there on Sundays.(We means local people) Thanks.
Raymott VIP Member Joined Jun 29, 2008 Member Type Academic Native Language English Home Country Australia Current Location Australia Mar 7, 2013 #6 "We don't go" is the negation of the present tense "We go". "We won't go" is the negation of the future 'tense' "We will go". Is that the question?
"We don't go" is the negation of the present tense "We go". "We won't go" is the negation of the future 'tense' "We will go". Is that the question?
W Winwin2011 Senior Member Joined Aug 4, 2011 Member Type Interested in Language Native Language Chinese Home Country Hong Kong Current Location Hong Kong Mar 7, 2013 #7 Raymott said: "We don't go" is the negation of the present tense "We go". "We won't go" is the negation of the future 'tense' "We will go". Is that the question? Click to expand... Thanks Raymott. Other than the future meaning of "Won't", "Won't" can be used to talk about refusal. e.g The car won't start. That' my question.
Raymott said: "We don't go" is the negation of the present tense "We go". "We won't go" is the negation of the future 'tense' "We will go". Is that the question? Click to expand... Thanks Raymott. Other than the future meaning of "Won't", "Won't" can be used to talk about refusal. e.g The car won't start. That' my question.
emsr2d2 Moderator Staff member Joined Jul 28, 2009 Member Type English Teacher Native Language British English Home Country UK Current Location UK Mar 7, 2013 #8 Winwin2011 said: Thanks Raymott. Other than the future meaning of "won't", "won't" can be used to talk about refusal. e.g "The car won't start." That's my question. Click to expand... Yes, if someone or something "won't" do something, it means they are refusing to do something. Of course, a car can't literally refuse to do anything. What your car is doing is "failing to start".
Winwin2011 said: Thanks Raymott. Other than the future meaning of "won't", "won't" can be used to talk about refusal. e.g "The car won't start." That's my question. Click to expand... Yes, if someone or something "won't" do something, it means they are refusing to do something. Of course, a car can't literally refuse to do anything. What your car is doing is "failing to start".
Raymott VIP Member Joined Jun 29, 2008 Member Type Academic Native Language English Home Country Australia Current Location Australia Mar 8, 2013 #9 Winwin2011 said: Thanks Raymott. Other than the future meaning of "Won't", "Won't" can be used to talk about refusal. e.g The car won't start. That' my question. Click to expand... That was your question in another thread, I think. In this one, which I read first, there is no context.
Winwin2011 said: Thanks Raymott. Other than the future meaning of "Won't", "Won't" can be used to talk about refusal. e.g The car won't start. That' my question. Click to expand... That was your question in another thread, I think. In this one, which I read first, there is no context.