0
Pleasehelp Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

It'll/it'd

it'll be cool if you can stay till kevin arrives. Or

it'd be cool if you can stay till kevin arrives.

Which one is better?
  

Top answer

Hi, I don't understand. You are asking about subtleties of grammar yet you don't seem to care about using capital letters correctly. Do you realize that any sentence that does not start with a capital is incorrect?

  • Hi, I don't understand.
  • You are asking about subtleties of grammar yet you don't seem to care about using capital letters correctly.
  • Do you realize that any sentence that does not start with a capital is incorrect?
  • Best wishes, Clive
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

5 Answers
0
Hi,

I don't understand. You are asking about subtleties of grammar yet you don't seem to care about using capital letters correctly.

Do you realize that any sentence that does not start with a capital is incorrect?

Best wishes, Clive
0
It'll be cool if you can stay till kevin arrives. Or

It'd be cool if you can stay till kevin arrives.

Which one is better?
0
Hi,

Each is still incorrect, because each is still missing a capital letter.

Hint: Is my name clive or Clive?

Best wishes.
0
Hi,

It'll be cool if you can stay till Kevin arrives. Or

It'd be cool if you can stay till Kevin arrives.

Which one is better?

What's the difference between would and will? I know would is the past tense of will but could it be used differently depending on the context. Right?

0
Hi,

It'll be cool if you can stay till Kevin arrives. There is a real possibility that you can stay.

Or

It'd be cool if you can could stay till Kevin arrives. These words sound like your staying is hypothetical/impossible/unlikely. But this form of words is also commonly used for politeness. The speaker is probably asking 'you' to st

Related Questions