0
Onizo Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

Would, will, or simple present

He says "no" to everything. If we ask him to bath, he would say no, and if we ask to him to finish the bath, he would also say no.

I wonder if "would" is correctly used, or it should be all "he says"?

Thank you.
  

Top answer

onizo to bath I think you want "to bathe" or "to take a bath". In any case "to bathe" and "to finish the bath" do not seem the kind of idiomatic opposites you want here. Present habitual: He says "no" to everything.

  • onizo to bath I think you want "to bathe" or "to take a bath".
  • In any case "to bathe" and "to finish the bath" do not seem the kind of idiomatic opposites you want here.
  • Present habitual: He says "no" to everything.
  • If we ask him to stay, he says "no", and if we ask him to leave, he says "no".
  • Past habitual: He [said / would say] "no" to everything.
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
onizoto bath
I think you want "to bathe" or "to take a bath". In any case "to bathe" and "to finish the bath" do not seem the kind of idiomatic opposites you want here.

Present habitual:

He says "no" to everything. If we ask him to stay, he says "no", and if we ask him to leave, he says "no".

Past habitual:

He [s

Related Questions