[Grammar] nothing wrong

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Will17

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 28, 2008
Member Type
Student or Learner
Native Language
French
Home Country
France
Current Location
UK
Hello!

What's the right structure after the phrase "there is nothing wrong"?

-There is nothing wrong doing this.

-There is nothing wrong in doing this.

-There is nothing wrong with doing this.

-There is nothing wrong to do this (I don't like this one!).

Thank you
W
 
Hello!

What's the right structure after the phrase "there is nothing wrong"?

-There is nothing wrong doing this.

-There is nothing wrong in doing this.

-There is nothing wrong with doing this.

-There is nothing wrong to do this (I don't like this one!).

Thank you
W
-There is nothing wrong in doing this.
-There is nothing wrong with doing this.
These two are both OK. I prefer the second.
 
-There is nothing wrong in doing this.
-There is nothing wrong with doing this.
These two are both OK. I prefer the second.

Maybe you'd use the first one more with "in followed by a verb" There's nothing wrong in using a computer in class".

And the second followed by a noun, noun phrase, pronoun. There's nothing wrong with the way you look. There's nothing wrong with it ( my car).

Am I right?
 
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