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Anonymous Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

I thought / I would think / I would have thought

I'm going to show you three examples.

1. A - Have you got any change?
B - Do I have change? What for?
A - For the vending machine!
I would have thought that was pretty obvious.
: I think it's sufficient to just say,
"I thought that was pretty obvious."
because literally 'I' thought so in the past,
which is a simple fact, but now I don't.
"I would think that as pretty obvious." is possible in the context?
If so, what are the differences among them?

2. Let's say there are two kids playing in the garden
and their mum comes out to tell them in for dinner.
But the kids have gone somewhere,
so she starts going around for them.
In some minutes, she finds the two and says.
"I would have known."
Why does she talk like that? What's the nuance?
I think it will do to say,
"I knew you would be here."
I wonder if "I would know" is a possible subsitute
for the highlighted sentence.
If it could be, what are the differences among the three?

3. A - Was the party great?
B - I don't / wouldn't know. I wasn't there.
: I think if B goes for "I don't know",
it will mean he's just saying the plain fact
that he wasn't there.
What if B replies, "I wouldn't know"?
What's the difference?
And is "I wouldn't have known" possible here?
If so, what are the differences?

I hear 'would do / would have done' structure is
closely related to a hypothetical if,
but I can't seem to figure it out.
I was guessing 'would have done' might mean
speculating about the past,
I've come to think it can't explain 'would do' option.

Help me out with this.
Thank you all.
  

Top answer

This is how these question appear to me. 1. A - Have you got any change?

  • This is how these question appear to me.
  • 1.
  • A - Have you got any change?
  • - This sounded to me like you are asking for loose change as a *** would.
  • If you say " do you have change for a newspaper / Coke machine.
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4 Answers
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This is how these question appear to me.
1. A - Have you got any change? - This sounded to me like you are asking for loose change as a *** would. If you say " do you have change for a newspaper / Coke machine. Everything is clear.
B - Do I have change? What for? -
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A is standing in front of a vending machine. His hands are fishing in his pocket, but the pockets are empty. B walks by.

1.
A - Have you got any change?
B - Do I have any change? What for?
A - For the vending machine! I would have thought that was pretty obvious.

A is responding with a somewhat sarcastic but indirect remark.
He is thinking: If I were you, it wo
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AlpheccaStarsA is responding with a somewhat sarcastic but indirect remark. He is thinking: If I were you, it would have been obvious to me that the coins were for the vending machine.
Thanks, AlpheccaStars!
I think I'm really coming closer to the meaning.
The effect of sarcasicm comes from the hidden if, 'If I were you?'
Then I'm thinking about si
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AnonymousThe effect of sarcasicm comes from the hidden if, 'If I were you?'
Yes, but the tone of voice is very important in detecting degrees of sarcasm.
Anonymous where 'I thought' is replaced with 'I would have thought',without the sarcastic implication. Does it depend on context?
Yes, and the tone of voice.

Mr. K

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