0
Sundarnaz Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Which conditional sentence

Thanks for your response to my post.

Ana has raised her voice against some new reforms that don't look much good for the employers. She says, "If my colleges didn't support me, the hurricane I'm fighting with, will affect them, too."

Is the sentence in bold correct? Which conditional tense should I use? Although past tense i.e 'didn't' doesn't look good with 'will', but nothing else seems fit here. Please tell me about the punctuation, too.

  

Top answer

sundarnaz Ana has raised her voice against some new reforms that don't look much good for the employers. Do you mean for the employ ees ? " Whether the new reforms can realistically be called a "hurricane" depends upon their severity and scope.

  • sundarnaz Ana has raised her voice against some new reforms that don't look much good for the employers.
  • Do you mean for the employ ees ?
  • " Whether the new reforms can realistically be called a "hurricane" depends upon their severity and scope.
  • g.
  • "The man, who looked about 50, came towards me), and possibly some unusual special cases or sentence structures, there should never be a comma between a verb and its subject.
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
sundarnazAna has raised her voice against some new reforms that don't look much good for the employers.

Do you mean for the employees?

Most probably you want this:

"If my colleagues don't support me, the hurricane I'm fighting against/with will affect them too."

Whether the new reforms can realistically b

Related Questions