0
Anonymous Posted 10 years ago
Vocabulary

Will have earned

He says Jeremy will have earned right to lead Labour party without interruptions if he renews mandate.
He says Jeremy will earn right to lead Labour party without interruptions if he renews mandate.

Is there any essential difference in meaning between the future perfect tense and future simple one used in the above?
  

Top answer

First, here are some corrections. 'Interruptions' may not be a suitable word here. He says Jeremy will have earned the right to lead the Labour party without interruptions if he renews his mandate.

  • First, here are some corrections.
  • 'Interruptions' may not be a suitable word here.
  • He says Jeremy will have earned the right to lead the Labour party without interruptions if he renews his mandate.
  • He says Jeremy will earn the right to lead the Labour party without interruptions if he renews his mandate .
  • #1 is best.
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.

2 Answers
0
First, here are some corrections.
'Interruptions' may not be a suitable word here.

He says Jeremy will have earned the right to lead the Labour party without interruptions if he renews his mandate.
He says Jeremy will earn the right to lead the Labour party without interruptions if he renews his mandate.
0
Thank you, Clive, for the explanation and corrections.

Related Questions