this post was submitted on 12 Apr 2025
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The problem isn't the word, it's grammatical.
I'm not explaining this with proper terms as it's my first language and didn't pay attention in class as a kid but: Anymore is negative, but the verb itself needs a negating adverb. In english the correct phrase is:
Which isn't an approximation. "Now" in context means exactly "from a certain point on", and is the positive version.
To grammatically use "anymore" you need to change the wording/structure altogether, and add negation:
Alternatively, changing the meaning altogether for the sake of grammar:
To highlight why it's wrong, I just use the example of asking if the store has widgets in stock, and the clerk says, "We have any." (Compare to, "We don't have any.")
But your example has a glaring flaw! What if the widget store did indeed stock every widget? An excellent boast in that case.
you just elaborated on what I said. also I don't know what you mean by "it's not the word it's grammatical"—the only reason it doesn't grammatically make sense is the because of the word itself. if "mondy" was the word you could be using it either way.
I disagree that "now" is the positive version of anymore. you can't use it in past tense. you could use "by then" but I think we're possibly semantically getting further from "anymore".
They both have a meaning of "presently" with reference to a change that occured in the past.
'Now' is used when something presently is the case (positive) and 'anymore' is used when something presently is no longer the case (negative).
Anymore is in the present just as much as now is. They both require present tense verbs even though they tell you something of the past.
anymore isn't in the present as much as now is; you can use it with literally any time frame.
Thanks for the conversation, interesting to chat about. But I've lost interest now. Have a good one!
no worries I was running out of steam myself anyway lol