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Anonymous Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

Future tense or present tense

Two sentences: 'You are slowly coming to the end of the most demanding, heavy financial cycle in 29 years. Yet, from Christmas, the clouds roll away.'

The second sentence does not use WILL to describe something that will happen in the future. Is this grammatically correct?

  

Top answer

anonymous Two sentences: 'You are slowly coming to the end of the most demanding, heavy financial cycle in 29 years. ' The second sentence does not use WILL to describe something that will happen in the future. Is this grammatically correct?

  • anonymous Two sentences: 'You are slowly coming to the end of the most demanding, heavy financial cycle in 29 years.
  • ' The second sentence does not use WILL to describe something that will happen in the future.
  • Is this grammatically correct?
  • It is grammatically correct.
  • It's a matter of style.
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1 Answers
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anonymous

Two sentences: 'You are slowly coming to the end of the most demanding, heavy financial cycle in 29 years. Yet, from Christmas, the clouds roll away.'

The second sentence does not use WILL to describe something that will happen in the future. Is this grammatically correct?

It is grammatically correct. It's a matter of style. Here the

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