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PreciousJones Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

invite

I understand that the suite package may turn you off but if you invited/invite your employees and clients to the suite it usually makes a good impression.

What's the difference between using: invited and invite

Thank you.
  

Top answer

PreciousJones if you invited/invite your employees and clients to the suite it usually makes a good impression. You know this one! If you invite, it makes.

  • PreciousJones if you invited/invite your employees and clients to the suite it usually makes a good impression.
  • You know this one!
  • If you invite, it makes.
  • If you invited, it would make.
  • CJ
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3 Answers
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PreciousJonesif you invited/invite your employees and clients to the suite it usually makes a good impression.
You know this one!

If you invite, it makes.
If you invited, it would make.

CJ
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CalifJim PreciousJonesif you invited/invite your employees and clients to the suite it usually makes a good impression.You know this one!If you invite, it makes.If you invited, it would make.CJ
This wasn't written by me, but by a ticket agent. I thought there was something off, so I decided to get a second opinion.

He wrote:

If you invited
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PreciousJones So it's supposed to be:If you invited your employees and clients to the suite it would usually make a good impression.
Yes. Or the other version I gave you, which I think is even better. If you invite ..., it usually makes ....

CJ

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