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Tkacka15 Posted 8 years ago
Vocabulary

He'll always have... in 2013

While we wait, Peter Oh has been staring at the teamsheets in lieu of action: “I noticed that Porto fittingly have a player named Paciencia (patience in Portuguese) among the substitutes, waiting for his chance. In contrast, the visitors’ bench features a goalkeeper presumably low on paciencia after losing his starting role.” Poor Simon! Ah well. He’ll always have Stoke at home in 2013. (The Guardian's live football report.)

Does simple future He'll always have grammatically collocate with the adverbial in 2013 in He’ll always have Stoke at home in 2013?

  

Top answer

", though to properly understand this, one would need to know who Simon is, what happened in the match against Stoke in 2013, and why that is relevant to the present situation. You also didn't say when this was written, but I assume it was recently?

  • ", though to properly understand this, one would need to know who Simon is, what happened in the match against Stoke in 2013, and why that is relevant to the present situation.
  • You also didn't say when this was written, but I assume it was recently?
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1 Answers
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Probably it means something like "He'll always have the memory/experience of ...", though to properly understand this, one would need to know who Simon is, what happened in the match against Stoke in 2013, and why that is relevant to the present situation. You also didn't say when this was written, but I assume i

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