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Park sang joon Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

What will I have gained?/What have I gained?

The protagonist is a royal member of Amber and one of the Courts of Chaos.
He was just now transported by the Pattern, who is god-like being of Order, to a very strange Shadow, which is one of parallel worlds of Amber, as blacking out.
The protagonist is now getting advice about what to do form his sentient strap-like weapon Frakir through telepathy.
It says he have to guard the armors and arms in a cavern against anything.

Say I sit here all night and watch the stuff. Maybe something even comes along and makes a pass at it. Say I fight it off. Morning comes, the stuff is still here. Then what? What have I gained?
["Knight of Shadows" of The Great Book of Amber by Roger Zelazny]
I'd like to know why it is "What have I gained?," not "What will I have gained?".
Thank you in advance for your help.
  

Top answer

Say introduces a hypothetical scenario. Such a scenario, especially a dramatic one, is commonly narrated in present tense, as I have indicated in bold. Say I sit here all night and watch the stuff.

  • Say introduces a hypothetical scenario.
  • Such a scenario, especially a dramatic one, is commonly narrated in present tense, as I have indicated in bold.
  • Say I sit here all night and watch the stuff.
  • Maybe something even comes along and makes a pass at it.
  • Say I fight it off.
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1 Answers
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Say introduces a hypothetical scenario. Such a scenario, especially a dramatic one, is commonly narrated in present tense, as I have indicated in bold.

Say I sit here all night and watch the stuff. Maybe something even comes along and makes a pass at it. Say I f

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