Difference between SOMETHING, ANYTHING and NOTHING – Basic English Grammar
Wanna speak real English from your first lesson? Sign up for your free lifetime account at EnglishClass101.com. Send your questions here! Send your questions to me at this website! This website, please. So I can find them all in one place. Hi everybody, welcome back to Ask Alisha, the weekly series where you ask me questions and I answer them. Maybe. First question! First question this week comes from Isik Alexander again. Hi, Isik. Uh, Isik says, “hi Alisha, what’s the difference between ‘store’ and ‘shop’?” Store and shop. I think this question is about nouns. The difference between the noun “store” and the noun “shop.” In American English, there’s really no difference between the two, however, we tend to use “store” more often than “shop.” As verbs, however, they’re quite different. To store something means to keep something away. Like, to store something in like a cupboard or to store something in your house, or to store something in a storage unit. You’re keeping that, usually for a long time. Like, storing something for winter, or you’re storing something for the next season or the next year. She stores emergency food in a cabinet.
They stored meat over the winter. To shop, however, as a verb, means to go out and look for something to buy. I need to shop for a new car. He wants to shop for a watch. Also, one interesting point: when we talk about going to the supermarket, actually, we usually say, “I’m going to the store.” We always use the article “the.” We always say “I’m going to the store,” or “I think I’m gonna go to the store.” I’m going to the store.
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