No problem for/to me.

English grammar questions, answered by Alan

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McKinney
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No problem for/to me.

Post by McKinney »

Hi, can you tell me what the different meaning is for these two sentences or do they have the same meaning?

There's no problem for me to have three people at the meeting.
&
There's no problem to me to have three people at the meeting.

If I used "it's" instead of "there's" would it make any difference?

Thank you! :-)
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Alan
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Re: No problem for/to me.

Post by Alan »

'For' is correct and "it's" is slightly more natural (meaning unaffected).
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