"Do you have ___ more questions on this topic?
Aany
Bmany
Cso many
Dsome
Answer:
A. any
Read Explanation:
Grammar Rule: The word "any" is standardly used in questions and negative sentences.
Question: "Do you have any money?"
Negative: "I don't have any questions."
Context: The sentence is a general, open-ended question asking if more questions exist. "Any" is the most natural and grammatically correct choice for this context.
Why the other options are incorrect:
Many: "Many" is used for a large quantity of countable things, but it's typically used in affirmative statements (e.g., "I have many questions"). Using it in a question like this ("Do you have many more questions?") sounds less natural and implies you expect a large number.
So many: "So many" expresses a surprising or excessive amount and is used for emphasis in exclamations or statements (e.g., "You have so many questions!"). It is not suitable for a neutral question like this.
Some: "Some" is generally used in affirmative statements (e.g., "I have some questions") or in questions that are offers or requests where you expect a "yes" answer (e.g., "Would you like some coffee?"). Since this is a simple yes/no question about availability, "any" is the correct choice.
Therefore, the grammatically correct and most natural-sounding sentence is:
"Do you have any more questions on this topic?"
