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PreciousJones Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

You'd

I'm asking a question:

After the x-rays have been taking you'll delivery them to Doctor McCormack, correct? Or

After the x-rays have been taking you'd delivery them to Doctor McCormack, correct?

Is there a difference between switching from will to would?

Is one more polite than the other?

Thank you!
  

Top answer

After the x-rays have been taken, you'll deliver them to Doctor McCormack? 'Delivery' is a noun. You need a verb in the clause 'you will deliver them to Dr.

  • After the x-rays have been taken, you'll deliver them to Doctor McCormack?
  • 'Delivery' is a noun.
  • You need a verb in the clause 'you will deliver them to Dr.
  • Mc' 'will' is an auxilliary verb helping 'deliver'.
  • It is also a modal.
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2 Answers
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After the x-rays have been taken, you'll deliver them to Doctor McCormack?

'Delivery' is a noun. You need a verb in the clause 'you will deliver them to Dr. Mc'
'will' is an auxilliary verb helping 'deliver'. It is also a modal. Check your grammar books for the importance of modals in English.
There is a difference between 'would' and 'will'.
If you were asking someone to deli
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KosmoAfter the x-rays have been taken, you'll deliver them to Doctor McCormack?
After the x-rays have been taken, you'll deliver them to Doctor McCormack?

After the x-rays have been taken, you'd deliver them to Doctor McCormack?

So are both sentences useable? Can I use the the 2nd sentence for politeness?

Thanks!

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