"I will get married after I have solved the problem."
"I will get married after I have solved the problem."
In my grammar book, "will" is omitted between "I" and "have", like "I will get married after I will have solved the problem." Do you native English speakers agree with this? Thank you so much in advance.
Top answer
The 'will' has not been omitted; it was never there. '... when I will have got married' is not correct.
— Fivejedjon
The 'will' has not been omitted; it was never there.
'...
when I will have got married' is not correct.
In conditional and temporal clauses referring to a future situation, we normally use a present tense, simple, progressive or perfect.
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The 'will' has not been omitted; it was never there. '... when I will have got married' is not correct. In conditional and temporal clauses referring to a future situation, we normally use a present tense, simple, progressive or perfect.