Can anyone help me or could anyone help me?

Can anyone help me or could anyone help me?

There may be a small difference depending on the context but they are essentially interchangeable. You can also say ‘can somebody help me’ and ‘can anyone help me’.

Would someone or anyone?

They’re both grammatically correct, but you’re more likely to hear, “has anyone seen my bag?” since a person would be more likely to ask it as a general question to a group of people. You mine use “someone” if, say, you were asking for specifics or amplifying information. For example, suppose your child goes missing.

Can someone vs Can anyone?

Both phrases are interchangeable. Someone and anyone mean the same thing, which is any unspecified person. It is usually intended as a plea for help from a group of people, but is sometimes said in frustration or as an exclamation when there is no group present.

Is someone and somebody the same?

There is no difference in meaning between someone and somebody, but somebody is more common in spoken English, and someone is more common in written English. Be Careful! You don’t usually use `someone’ or `somebody’ as part of the object of a negative sentence.

Could or can you please?

We also use ‘could’ to ask permission; it is more polite or formal than ‘can’. Changing the word order to “could you please” is no more or less polite – it’s a matter of style. whether requests starting with “Please can/could you…” render the same degree of politeness as those that start with “Could you please…”.

Can anyone help me out meaning?

Definition of help out : to do something so another person’s job or task is easier I can’t do this myself. Won’t someone please help me out?

Has anyone or have anyone?

Anyone is a third-person, singular indefinite pronoun, but does always goes with have. “Has anyone got a pen?” and “Who here has got a pen?” are also correct.

What’s the difference between everybody and everyone?

There is no difference in meaning between everyone and everybody, but everyone is more common in written English, and everybody is more common in spoken English.

Does anybody or anyone know?

Do you know why ‘Does anybody’ is correct? ‘Anybody’ is a third person singular form and takes -s in the present simple tense. That’s why the question form requires -s and ‘Does anybody’ is correct. The same would apply to ‘Does anyone’, ‘Does anything’ etc.

Is could you please rude?

They’re not impolite — they’re just less polite than the versions with please.

Is could you please a question?

A polite request can be made with an interrogative clause (‘Could you please pay us’), an imperative clause (‘Please pay us’), a declarative clause (‘We would appreciate it if you could pay us’), and so on. I use the words ‘question’ and ‘request’ and ‘statement’ as kinds of meaning, not terms of grammar.

What is the difference between help me and help me out?

Re: help me vs help me out Helping somebody means simply “giving assistance/aid”. “Help smb. out” means to help smb.

When do you use anyone, anything or anything?

Anyone, anybody and anything are indefinite pronouns. We use anyone, anybody and anything to refer to both an open, unlimited set of things or people and specific things or people. We use them with a singular verb:

Are there any options in the help me book?

The HELP ME Book There are options you have not thought about. Even the wisest, most intelligent and resourceful mind cannot think of every option. A life-saving option may be right in front of you, even within you, and because you are in such a dire state you’re not able to recognize it clearly.

Is there any help I can give you for free?

I’m answering. I offer sincere help throughout this site, it’s pure and it’s for free. There is no advice here, nothing to buy, no ads, no exercises or tests to take, no new things for you to ‘believe’ or ‘follow’.

What is the difference between anyone and anybody?

Anyone and anybody have no difference in meaning. Anybody is a little less formal than anyone. Anyone is used more in writing than anybody: I didn’t know anybody at the party.