Do You Say I have few questions or I have many questions?

Do You Say I have few questions or I have many questions?

Don’t use this phrase. The word “few” (not many) means something different from “a few” (several). So, saying “I have few questions” basically means, “I don’t have many questions.” If you want to ask for more information, you wouldn’t use this phrase. No examples available at the moment. Learn more… Hello,.

Which is correct, to ask a few questions to someone?

With the first one—to ask a few questions to someone—the appropriate way to phrase it would be: to pose a few questions to someone. Using the second one—to ask a few questions from someone—the proper way to phrase it would be: to ask a few questions of someone.

Which is grammatically correct, to ask a few questions to?

It is more correct to ask “ May I please ask you a few (some) questions?” Perhaps it is most respectful to ask permission to ask before asking anything at all. Perhaps this is already integral and rather impossible both at once.

Can you use the phrase my question regards?

You can say, my question regards, but you would be in the minority here. If you google that construction, you gat a decent number of hits, but if you look at the quality of the hits, it’s mostly personal blogs and questions to other bloggers.

What’s the difference between question concerns and question regards?

If you google that construction, you gat a decent number of hits, but if you look at the quality of the hits, it’s mostly personal blogs and questions to other bloggers. On the other hand, question concerns comes up in solid writing, if you will, like the New York Times and professional sites, as does question relates (to) and question regarding.

Which is better, ” with regards to ” or ” in regard to “?

“Regarding” is better than “in regard to”. “About” is absolutely fine and good old plain English – nothing wrong with it. Plain English is good and eminently preferable every time. All too often people try and be clever by using fancy and/or unnecessary words. Just say it how it is. You speak in regard to something or with regard to someone.

When do you speak in regard to something or with regard to someone?

You speak in regard to something or with regard to someone. Examples: In regard to work habits, John puts in too many hours. With regard to Peter, he puts in none. Please justify your answer with reference to appropriate sources, otherwise it is no more than your opinion. – TrevorD Sep 4 ’13 at 16:54