There are 60 plus fancy shops in the building, you can go to any.

Status
Not open for further replies.

thehammer

Member
Joined
Mar 20, 2023
Member Type
Student or Learner
Native Language
Hindi
Home Country
India
Current Location
India
Is there any days difference in meaning? Do they sound natural?

1- There are 60 plus fancy shops in the building, you can go to any.
2- There are 60 plus fancy shops in the building, you can go to any of them.
3- There are 60 plus fancy shops in the building, you can go to any shop.
 
I'd go with the second, and I'd also break it into two sentences - 'There are 60 plus fancy shops in the building. You can go to any of them'.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 5jj
Is there any days difference in meaning between the following three sentences? Do they sound natural?

1- There are 60-plus fancy shops in the building; you can go to any.
2- There are 60-plus fancy shops in the building; you can go to any of them.
3- There are 60-plus fancy shops in the building; you can go to any shop.
Note my changes above. You need to hyphenate "60-plus". Like White Hat, I'd split all of them into two separate sentences. However, I have used a semi-colon in each one above as that's an alternative. Your sentences all contained comma splices.
Sentence 2 is the most natural.
Sentence 1 is OK.
Sentence 3 is too wordy with the repetition of "shop".
 
Last edited by a moderator:
There are over 60 fancy shops in the building. You can go to any of them.
I have to ask. Is it normal there that there are some shops in a mall that people are not allowed to visit?
 
Another alternative to fixing those comma splices is adding a coordinating conjunction after the comma. 'And' or 'so' see like the best options for these sentences. I concur that the second one is the more natural of the two.


1- There are 60-plus fancy shops in the building, and/so you can go to any.
2- There are 60-plus fancy shops in the building, so/and you can go to any of them.


One a side note, what is a 'fancy shop'? It's not used in AmE.
 
If we're talking about how to write these utterances down, I'd go with 60+.

I think 60-plus is an odd way to write this, to say the least.
 
One a side note, what is a 'fancy shop'? It's not used in AmE.
In Indian English, a fancy shop (often called XYZ Fancy Store(s)) is a shop that sells costume jewellery and accessories (especially women's) and decorative, glitzy items. The term isn't as common now as it used to be.

I don't know if the OP is using it in that meaning or if he just means posh, expensive shops. Maybe he'll tell us.
 
Last edited:
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top