
Student or Learner
Hello.
Can I omit "any" in my sentence?
"There were not any medical bills resulted from that accident."
I think I could also say "There were no medical bills resulted from that accident."
My humble opinion: "any" should be used and the second sentence is correct.
Rachel, please post threads of this nature here in Editing & Writing Topics, especially as you already have 11 threads listed on the first page of Ask a Teacher.
Last edited by Rover_KE; 18-Sep-2020 at 17:58.
I prefer"resulting" to be omitted.
I am not a teacher or a native speaker.
You could also say:
There were no medical bills as a result of the accident.
Not a professional teacher
You don't need to open with "There were". Here are the simplest ways to say it is:
No medical bills resulted from the accident.
The accident resulted in no medical bills.
Remember - if you don't use correct capitalisation, punctuation and spacing, anything you write will be incorrect.