Someone buys an expensive car. They say "I cant use the railway!" Are you going to tell them they're wrong? We dont know if they live next to a railway line. They're also heavily invested in the car and unlikely to pay out for rail tickets.
Someone buys an expensive car. They say "I cant use the railway!" Are you going to tell them they're wrong?
Yes. Because they are.
We dont know if they live next to a railway line. They're also heavily invested in the car and unlikely to pay out for rail tickets.
None of which indicates they "can't use the railway". It may not be their preferred travel method, which is fine (in the metaphorical sense), but to say they "can't" use the railway is simply untrue.
Someone buys an expensive car. They say "I cant use the railway!" Are you going to tell them they're wrong? We dont know if they live next to a railway line. They're also heavily invested in the car and unlikely to pay out for rail tickets.
They didn't say "I can't use the railway" they said "the railway doesn't run to [place the railway definitely runs to]"
Yes. Because they are.
None of which indicates they "can't use the railway". It may not be their preferred travel method, which is fine (in the metaphorical sense), but to say they "can't" use the railway is simply untrue.