In a message I sent, I wrote:
I am preparing my room to be painted, which means I am moving furniture out of the room, and cleaning the walls from the mold. There isn't nothing much I need to do.
Leaving out the last sentence, which I would have thought could suggest I was not the person painting my room, would not to be painted suggest painting my room was not a task for me?
I think that I am preparing my room to paint it would imply that painting my room was my task.
Is there another sentence I could have used to make clear I was doing the preparatory tasks to allow another person to paint my room without explicitly saying another person will paint my room?
Answer
The way you have phrased:
I am preparing my room to be painted
Does not imply anything about who will do the painting, it is left ambiguous. If anything, having "I" as the subject might imply that you are the one who will do the painting.
If you change the subject of the first clause to be my room and make a second clause about your actions, this gives a much stronger implication that you are not the one who will be doing the painting. E.g.
My room will be painted soon, so I am preparing it by moving furniture out and cleaning the walls.
There are a couple of other grammatical problems with your message:
It should be "cleaning mold from the walls", not "cleaning the walls from the mold". The walls are a permanent object and you are taking the mold away from the surface of it, therefore the mold is on the walls, not vice versa.
"isn't nothing much" is a double-negative, so means the opposite of what you want it to mean. While it is common (in speech) in certain dialects, it is considered bad grammar and so should generally be avoided. To give your intended meaning, you could use either:
is nothing much
or
isn't anything much
either would be fine, but the former is perhaps preferable.
No comments:
Post a Comment