0
PreciousJones Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

Since

Please proofread:

Since Ms. Jones is willing to work with me on the letter, I'm gonna have her go over the first draft in case we've left/we leave out some important information. So, it may take more than just today to finish the whole essay. Would you be willing that I pay for half now and the other half after we've completed/we complete the final product?

Should I use the present perfect or present simple tense in this scenario? I'm describing a future event. And what's the difference between the usages?

Thanks!

  

Top answer

Since Ms. Jones is willing to work with me on the letter, I'm gonna going to have her go over the first draft in case we've left / we leave out some important information. So, it may take more than just today to finish the whole essay.

  • Since Ms.
  • Jones is willing to work with me on the letter, I'm gonna going to have her go over the first draft in case we've left / we leave out some important information.
  • So, it may take more than just today to finish the whole essay.
  • Would you be willing that I pay to receive payment for half now and for the other half after we've completed/we complete the final product?
  • You may wish to say "gonna" when you read this aloud, but it's not written that way.
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.

1 Answers
0
Since Ms. Jones is willing to work with me on the letter, I'm gonna going to have her go over the first draft in case we've left/we leave out some important information. So, it may take more than just today to finish the whole essay. Would you be willing that I pay

Related Questions