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Jack112 Posted 21 years ago
Grammar

Will

What do these ones mean? What is the difference between them?

1. Some people will work things out and some just don't know how to chnage.

2. Some people work things out and some just don't know how to chnage.

Thanks.
  

Top answer

Where have you been, Jack? Not ill, I hope? g.

  • Where have you been, Jack?
  • Not ill, I hope?
  • g.
  • emigrants about to depart for a new land); otherwise, it is a poor alternative to the timeless #2.
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3 Answers
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Where have you been, Jack? Not ill, I hope?

It seems to me that #1 has a specifically future context (as with e.g. emigrants about to depart for a new land); otherwise, it is a poor alternative to the timeless #2.
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I have been very busy with school lately and I have gotten a bit lazy with my english. I still have a lot of questiosn to ask! Emotion: smile
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No difference in effective meaning, I think. #1 considers the second sort of people at this moment, and #2 considers them at the future moment of crisis, but the speaker's opinion of their ability to adapt is the same in both sentences.

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