a plan to do it

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Hansman

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Nov 17, 2023
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Korean
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South Korea
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I have learned that the noun plan has an appositive like There are no plans to build new offices. Here in the sentence plan means to build new offices ( plan = to build new offices )
How about this one The government has announced plans to create one million new training places. I thought that plan also means to create one million new training places, but it is like ways to create one million new training places. Can't I see it as 'plan = create one million new training places'? How can I distinguish between them in meaning? What do you think?

 
Thank you so much. Can I also see it as 'ways to create one million new training places'?
It doesn't necessarily mean the ways it's going to create them. It's just another way of saying "The government has announced that it plans to create one million new jobs" or "The government has announced that it has a plan to create one million new jobs".

Governments quite frequently claim that they plan to do something without having worked out how they're going to do it at all.
 
For normal people, I agree. For governments, that's frequently not the case (unfortunately).

I agree with the point you're making but I'd say if there's no thought out way of doing it, it's not strictly speaking a plan.
 
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