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EverestCTS Posted 4 years ago
Grammar

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A: If he come to the party tomorrow, that would be great.
Does sentence A mean he is not coming to the party tomorrow? Or It means it’s unlikely that he is coming to the party tomorrow and that it’s all about unlikelihood?


B: He is not going to visit the grandma with me tomorrow. If he went to visit the grandma with me, that would be great.

Is sentence B correct?

  

Top answer

/came? to the party tomorrow EverestCTS A: If he comes/came to the party tomorrow, that would be great. Does sentence A mean he is not coming to the party tomorrow?

  • /came?
  • to the party tomorrow EverestCTS A: If he comes/came to the party tomorrow, that would be great.
  • Does sentence A mean he is not coming to the party tomorrow?
  • No.
  • It means the speaker doesn't know whether he will come or not.
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1 Answers
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EverestCTSIf he come comes?/came? to the party tomorrow
EverestCTSA: If he comes/came to the party tomorrow, that would be great.
Does sentence A mean he is not coming to the party tomorrow?

No. It means the speaker doesn't know whether he will come or not. The

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