The words
some and
any are used for countable and uncountable nouns. In general, we could say that
some means
a few / a little and
any means
none in negative clauses or
a few / a little in questions.
Positive Clauses
In positive clauses, we usually use
some.
- Example:
- I have bought some bread.
- I have bought some apples.
Negative Clauses
In negative clauses, we use
any. Note, however, that
any alone is not a negative - it must be
not ... any
- Example:
- I have not bought any bread.
- I have not bought any apples.
Questions
In questions, we usually use
any.
- Example:
- Have you bought any bread?
- Have you bought any apples?
Compound Words with some & any
Some &
any can also be part of compound words such as:
- something / anything
- someone / anyone
- somewhere / anywhere
Note that
some &
any have to be used with a noun while compound words with
some &
any can stand on their own.
- Example:
- I have bought some bread.
- I have bought something.
However,
some and
any need not stand directly before the noun. Sometimes, the noun appears somewhere before
some or
any and is not repeated. So if you are not sure whether to use
some or
something for example, check if there is a noun in the sentence that you can place after
some.
- Example:
- I do not have to buy bread. Rachel has already bought some [bread].
Exceptions
Positive Clauses with Any
We usually use
some in positive clauses. But after
never,
without,
hardly, we use
any.
- Example:
- We never go anywhere.
- She did her homework without any help.
- There’s hardly anyone here.
Also in
if clauses, we usually use
any.
- Example:
- If there is anything to do, just call me.
Questions with Some
We usually use
any in questions. But if we expect or want the other to answer ‚yes‘, we use
some.
- Example:
- Have you got any brothers and sisters?
→ some people have brothers or sisters, others don't - we cannot expect the answer to be ‚yes‘
- Would you like some biscuits?
→ we offer something and want to encourage the other to say ‚ja‘
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