0
Anonymous Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

If it will

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If it rains tomorrow, the picnic is / will be cancelled.

If it will rain tomorrow, the picnic is / will be cancelled.

Are the two sentences obove right?

If so, what is the difference?

Please answer my questions.

Thank you, bye~^^
  

Top answer

This is the correct one: If it rains tomorrow, the picnic will be cancelled. You don't want to combine if and will , as in *if it will rain . That's not correct English.

  • This is the correct one: If it rains tomorrow, the picnic will be cancelled.
  • You don't want to combine if and will , as in *if it will rain .
  • That's not correct English.
  • CJ
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1 Answers
0
This is the correct one: If it rains tomorrow, the picnic will be cancelled.

You don't want to combine if and will, as in *if it will rain. That's not correct English.

CJ

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