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Newguest Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

when he's finished

Hi

Is it OK to write:

I want you to listen to him and when he's finished you will answer two questions.
  

Top answer

A comma after "him" would help. I have a problem with "parallel construction," or the lack thereof. " I'm not sure what the solution is.

  • A comma after "him" would help.
  • I have a problem with "parallel construction," or the lack thereof.
  • " I'm not sure what the solution is.
  • It can't be "and when he's finished I want you to answer two questions," because the wanting is now, not when he's finished.
  • " Others may feel it's perfectly okay to use the two different types of instructions together.
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2 Answers
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A comma after "him" would help.

I have a problem with "parallel construction," or the lack thereof. You give two instructions: one is "I want you to ---," the other is "you will ---."

I'm not sure what the solution is. It can't be "and when he's finished I want you to answer two questions," because the wanting is now, not when he's finished. (However, many people would

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