"Nowadays, there is a tendency for people to have only or mostly knowledge of irrelevant..."

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Jun 3, 2022
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A: "Nowadays, there is a tendency for people to have only or mostly knowledge of irrelevant news."

B: "Nowadays, there is a tendency for people to only or mostly have knowledge of irrelevant news."

C: "Nowadays, there is a tendency for people to only or to mostly have knowledge of irrelevant news"
Source: me


1) I think all those sentences have the same meaning. Am I right?
2) Are all of them grammatical?
 
I'd have to admit they're all grammatically possible but they're all unnatural. I think what you're trying to say is "These days, a lot of people tend to know only irrelevant trivia, not anything about important news" (or something similar).
 
Yes, that's what I was trying to say. Please, tell me a natural way to express that idea.
 
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