You can't carry on the liquids.
Can I say that 'You can't carry the liquids on.' instead of 'You can't carry on the liquids.' for the same meaning?
Why is there the word on in the sentence?
Is it from the sentence 'You can't carry the liquids on the plane.'?
What do you native English speakers think? Thank you so much as usual in advance.
Comments
Yes. I'd say your version is better.
Yes. Well, it's more like "You can't carry the liquids onto the plane." But that's just syntax.
Your use of the means that you are referring to some in particular. If you mean liquids in general, delete that word.
It looks like it refers to passengers getting on an airliner.
You need to delete the red part. Only you know where you found that so, you should give the context.