I meet any man of the group. [Why doesn't this make sense?}












2















You can say:



[1] You can use any pen to fill out this form.



But people say you can't say:



[2] I meet any man of the group.
[3] I met any man of the group.



I wonder why you can't. To me, with [2], you have a good intention of seeing any man that belongs to the group who wants to see me. Or, this describes your inclination. [3] is just the past version of [2]



Why can't you say the two sentences alone.










share|improve this question























  • These sentences modified with qualities like so would be okay right? (1) I met any man of the group who wanted to meet me. (2) I met every man of the group who wanted to meet me. (3) I met each man of the group who wanted to meet me.

    – Sssamy
    Dec 1 '18 at 8:56


















2















You can say:



[1] You can use any pen to fill out this form.



But people say you can't say:



[2] I meet any man of the group.
[3] I met any man of the group.



I wonder why you can't. To me, with [2], you have a good intention of seeing any man that belongs to the group who wants to see me. Or, this describes your inclination. [3] is just the past version of [2]



Why can't you say the two sentences alone.










share|improve this question























  • These sentences modified with qualities like so would be okay right? (1) I met any man of the group who wanted to meet me. (2) I met every man of the group who wanted to meet me. (3) I met each man of the group who wanted to meet me.

    – Sssamy
    Dec 1 '18 at 8:56
















2












2








2








You can say:



[1] You can use any pen to fill out this form.



But people say you can't say:



[2] I meet any man of the group.
[3] I met any man of the group.



I wonder why you can't. To me, with [2], you have a good intention of seeing any man that belongs to the group who wants to see me. Or, this describes your inclination. [3] is just the past version of [2]



Why can't you say the two sentences alone.










share|improve this question














You can say:



[1] You can use any pen to fill out this form.



But people say you can't say:



[2] I meet any man of the group.
[3] I met any man of the group.



I wonder why you can't. To me, with [2], you have a good intention of seeing any man that belongs to the group who wants to see me. Or, this describes your inclination. [3] is just the past version of [2]



Why can't you say the two sentences alone.







quantifiers






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Dec 1 '18 at 1:43









SssamySssamy

1219




1219













  • These sentences modified with qualities like so would be okay right? (1) I met any man of the group who wanted to meet me. (2) I met every man of the group who wanted to meet me. (3) I met each man of the group who wanted to meet me.

    – Sssamy
    Dec 1 '18 at 8:56





















  • These sentences modified with qualities like so would be okay right? (1) I met any man of the group who wanted to meet me. (2) I met every man of the group who wanted to meet me. (3) I met each man of the group who wanted to meet me.

    – Sssamy
    Dec 1 '18 at 8:56



















These sentences modified with qualities like so would be okay right? (1) I met any man of the group who wanted to meet me. (2) I met every man of the group who wanted to meet me. (3) I met each man of the group who wanted to meet me.

– Sssamy
Dec 1 '18 at 8:56







These sentences modified with qualities like so would be okay right? (1) I met any man of the group who wanted to meet me. (2) I met every man of the group who wanted to meet me. (3) I met each man of the group who wanted to meet me.

– Sssamy
Dec 1 '18 at 8:56












2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















3














[2] and [3] has no sense because these phrases are in Present Indefinite Tense. It's about what you usually do and not about you CAN do.
You can say:




I can meet any man of the group.




Or you can say (if it's about you):




I meet every man of the group.







share|improve this answer































    2














    Your first answer:



    We use "any" for indefinite quantities in questions and negative sentences. We use some in affirmative sentences:




    Q: Have you got any eggs?



    A1: I haven’t got any eggs.



    A2: I’ve got some eggs.



    But not: I’ve got any eggs.




    Second answer:



    We can use "any of" to refer to a part of a whole:



    So,




    I haven’t met any of the men from this group.




    Similarly:



    You can't say:




    Are any man going to the meeting?




    Correct one will be:




    Are any of you going to the meeting?







    share|improve this answer





















    • 1





      Your original answer had a faulty example. We can’t say, "I meet any of the men of this group,” (although one could say, “I won’t meet any of the men from this group”). We can't use “any of” to mean "part of a whole” in just any sentence – perhaps you could ask a question about that? Also, as a footnote, please be more careful with your spacing around punctuation.

      – J.R.
      Dec 1 '18 at 13:28













    Your Answer








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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    3














    [2] and [3] has no sense because these phrases are in Present Indefinite Tense. It's about what you usually do and not about you CAN do.
    You can say:




    I can meet any man of the group.




    Or you can say (if it's about you):




    I meet every man of the group.







    share|improve this answer




























      3














      [2] and [3] has no sense because these phrases are in Present Indefinite Tense. It's about what you usually do and not about you CAN do.
      You can say:




      I can meet any man of the group.




      Or you can say (if it's about you):




      I meet every man of the group.







      share|improve this answer


























        3












        3








        3







        [2] and [3] has no sense because these phrases are in Present Indefinite Tense. It's about what you usually do and not about you CAN do.
        You can say:




        I can meet any man of the group.




        Or you can say (if it's about you):




        I meet every man of the group.







        share|improve this answer













        [2] and [3] has no sense because these phrases are in Present Indefinite Tense. It's about what you usually do and not about you CAN do.
        You can say:




        I can meet any man of the group.




        Or you can say (if it's about you):




        I meet every man of the group.








        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Dec 1 '18 at 2:11









        Ivan OlshanskyIvan Olshansky

        26118




        26118

























            2














            Your first answer:



            We use "any" for indefinite quantities in questions and negative sentences. We use some in affirmative sentences:




            Q: Have you got any eggs?



            A1: I haven’t got any eggs.



            A2: I’ve got some eggs.



            But not: I’ve got any eggs.




            Second answer:



            We can use "any of" to refer to a part of a whole:



            So,




            I haven’t met any of the men from this group.




            Similarly:



            You can't say:




            Are any man going to the meeting?




            Correct one will be:




            Are any of you going to the meeting?







            share|improve this answer





















            • 1





              Your original answer had a faulty example. We can’t say, "I meet any of the men of this group,” (although one could say, “I won’t meet any of the men from this group”). We can't use “any of” to mean "part of a whole” in just any sentence – perhaps you could ask a question about that? Also, as a footnote, please be more careful with your spacing around punctuation.

              – J.R.
              Dec 1 '18 at 13:28


















            2














            Your first answer:



            We use "any" for indefinite quantities in questions and negative sentences. We use some in affirmative sentences:




            Q: Have you got any eggs?



            A1: I haven’t got any eggs.



            A2: I’ve got some eggs.



            But not: I’ve got any eggs.




            Second answer:



            We can use "any of" to refer to a part of a whole:



            So,




            I haven’t met any of the men from this group.




            Similarly:



            You can't say:




            Are any man going to the meeting?




            Correct one will be:




            Are any of you going to the meeting?







            share|improve this answer





















            • 1





              Your original answer had a faulty example. We can’t say, "I meet any of the men of this group,” (although one could say, “I won’t meet any of the men from this group”). We can't use “any of” to mean "part of a whole” in just any sentence – perhaps you could ask a question about that? Also, as a footnote, please be more careful with your spacing around punctuation.

              – J.R.
              Dec 1 '18 at 13:28
















            2












            2








            2







            Your first answer:



            We use "any" for indefinite quantities in questions and negative sentences. We use some in affirmative sentences:




            Q: Have you got any eggs?



            A1: I haven’t got any eggs.



            A2: I’ve got some eggs.



            But not: I’ve got any eggs.




            Second answer:



            We can use "any of" to refer to a part of a whole:



            So,




            I haven’t met any of the men from this group.




            Similarly:



            You can't say:




            Are any man going to the meeting?




            Correct one will be:




            Are any of you going to the meeting?







            share|improve this answer















            Your first answer:



            We use "any" for indefinite quantities in questions and negative sentences. We use some in affirmative sentences:




            Q: Have you got any eggs?



            A1: I haven’t got any eggs.



            A2: I’ve got some eggs.



            But not: I’ve got any eggs.




            Second answer:



            We can use "any of" to refer to a part of a whole:



            So,




            I haven’t met any of the men from this group.




            Similarly:



            You can't say:




            Are any man going to the meeting?




            Correct one will be:




            Are any of you going to the meeting?








            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Dec 1 '18 at 13:26









            J.R.

            98.8k8127244




            98.8k8127244










            answered Dec 1 '18 at 4:27









            Ambashankar SagitraAmbashankar Sagitra

            2976




            2976








            • 1





              Your original answer had a faulty example. We can’t say, "I meet any of the men of this group,” (although one could say, “I won’t meet any of the men from this group”). We can't use “any of” to mean "part of a whole” in just any sentence – perhaps you could ask a question about that? Also, as a footnote, please be more careful with your spacing around punctuation.

              – J.R.
              Dec 1 '18 at 13:28
















            • 1





              Your original answer had a faulty example. We can’t say, "I meet any of the men of this group,” (although one could say, “I won’t meet any of the men from this group”). We can't use “any of” to mean "part of a whole” in just any sentence – perhaps you could ask a question about that? Also, as a footnote, please be more careful with your spacing around punctuation.

              – J.R.
              Dec 1 '18 at 13:28










            1




            1





            Your original answer had a faulty example. We can’t say, "I meet any of the men of this group,” (although one could say, “I won’t meet any of the men from this group”). We can't use “any of” to mean "part of a whole” in just any sentence – perhaps you could ask a question about that? Also, as a footnote, please be more careful with your spacing around punctuation.

            – J.R.
            Dec 1 '18 at 13:28







            Your original answer had a faulty example. We can’t say, "I meet any of the men of this group,” (although one could say, “I won’t meet any of the men from this group”). We can't use “any of” to mean "part of a whole” in just any sentence – perhaps you could ask a question about that? Also, as a footnote, please be more careful with your spacing around punctuation.

            – J.R.
            Dec 1 '18 at 13:28




















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