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Pleasehelp Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

It'll

It'll taste better than that. Or

It'll tastes better than that.

Isn't it supposed to be singular? So why is it the first sentence?
  

Top answer

Do you say "He will comes to the party"? Do you say "She will knows the answer soon"? "

  • Do you say "He will comes to the party"?
  • Do you say "She will knows the answer soon"?
  • "
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7 Answers
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Do you say "He will comes to the party"?
Do you say "She will knows the answer soon"?

That's why you don't say "It will tastes better than that."
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I know, but is there a grammatical reason?
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Grammar GeekDo you say "He will comes to the party"?
Do you say "She will knows the answer soon"?

That's why you don't say "It will tastes better than that."

How come I can say He comes to the party or she knows the answer?
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Or it tastes better than that
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What is the key difference in those sentences? What is in one and not the other?
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Grammar GeekWhat is the key difference in those sentences? What is in one and not the other?

The verb will. So how does that change things? How does will affect the sentence grammar?
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I think you've worked this out for yourself.

With the word "will" you use the main form of the verb, not the inflected from.
He comes; he will come.
It tastes; it will taste.
etc.

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