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Discover LudwigThe phrase "have any notes" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when inquiring if someone possesses any written information or comments on a particular subject.
Example: "Before we start the meeting, do you have any notes to share with the team?"
Alternatives: "do you possess any notes" or "do you have any comments".
Exact(11)
I don't have any notes".
He hasn't made things much easier for himself by deciding not to have any notes.
Henein didn't have any notes, just a stack of folders – and in each one, an email printed on a single piece of paper.
He did not have any notes.
After she gave my laundry list of procedures I needed to get, I asked, "Do you have any notes on my actual acting?" She said "No".
Don't really have any notes for vodka, beyond the fact that two people refused to score, Lauren O'Neill just very sadly shaking her head (I put this down as: a 0!) and me just drawing a sad face, which I don't really remember doing but sounds about right.
Similar(48)
"His work is so exceptionally good, I rarely had any notes.
Has the real Chelsea had any notes for you on how to play her? Like, "Be drunker?" [Laughs] No, they really let me do my own thing.
Here was my opportunity to confess--to say that I had never had any notes, that I had invented the article, that I had crept back in the office, and just thrown it out.
Ms Bower denies having any note or recollection of the instruction being to given to delete a report and says she would have countermanded it.
Danny Deever does not have any such notes, but "Cleared" (a topical poem on the Parnell Commission), written in the same month as Danny Deever, does.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com