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Teo Posted 21 years ago
Grammar

future perfect

Bush reasserts his faith in Supreme Court choice Harriet Miers. He says, "She'll have been a judge, but nevertheless the philosophy won't change, and that's important to me."

We can use the future perfect to say that something will have been done, completed or achieved by a certain time in the future. We can also use will have ... to 'predict the present' - to say what we think or guess has probably happened.

But why does Bush use the future perfect in his statement?

Thank you very much for your reply.
  

Top answer

Hi, I think he is referring to the time after she becomes a judge, and saying that in that tome her opinions won't change. I think he should have used the verb 'become'. It's typical Bush-speak, don't sweat over it!

  • Hi, I think he is referring to the time after she becomes a judge, and saying that in that tome her opinions won't change.
  • I think he should have used the verb 'become'.
  • It's typical Bush-speak, don't sweat over it!
  • Clive
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1 Answers
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Hi,

I think he is referring to the time after she becomes a judge, and saying that in that tome her opinions won't change. I think he should have used the verb 'become'. It's typical Bush-speak, don't sweat over it!

Clive

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