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Anonymous Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

Please check.

GPY
anonymousI have got one more question raised in my mind. I could say add either ‘but you didn’t’ or and you did’ at the end of my original sentence, right? The sentence itself doesn’t say whether the action was done or not. Am I correct?

I'm not sure I understand what you are asking about. By "original sentence", do you mean the sentence "I figured Nancy would have told you"? It does not make sense to add either "but you didn't" or "and you did" to that sentence. Did you perhaps mean to type "but she [i.e. Nancy] didn't" and "and she did"? Or are you talking about something else?

Yes, Sir. I meant to type ‘but she didn’t’ or ‘and she did’. Am I able to add them at the end of the sentences if this type depending on the context?

  

Top answer

anonymous Yes, Sir. I meant to type ‘but she didn’t’ or ‘and she did’. Am I able to add them at the end of the sentences if this type depending on the context?

  • anonymous Yes, Sir.
  • I meant to type ‘but she didn’t’ or ‘and she did’.
  • Am I able to add them at the end of the sentences if this type depending on the context?
  • Assuming you are talking about Nancy's present knowledge (as in the original dialogue), this seems a better choice of tense to me: 1a.
  • ) (that) she hasn't.
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anonymousYes, Sir. I meant to type ‘but she didn’t’ or ‘and she did’. Am I able to add them at the end of the sentences if this type depending on the context?

Assuming you are talking about Nancy's present knowledge (as in the original dialogue), this seems a better choice of tense to me:

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