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brento1138
Joined: 17 Nov 2004
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Posted: Tue Jun 22, 2010 11:27 pm Post subject: Grammar question - tenses |
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I'm not sure if one, or both of these sentences are correct...
A) If you had been reluctant to give up what you had because you did not want to suffer losses...
B) If you had been reluctant to give up what you have because you do not want to suffer losses...
Are they both correct? |
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lichtarbeiter
Joined: 15 Nov 2006 Location: Korea
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Posted: Tue Jun 22, 2010 11:46 pm Post subject: Re: Grammar question - tenses |
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brento1138 wrote: |
I'm not sure if one, or both of these sentences are correct...
A) If you had been reluctant to give up what you had because you did not want to suffer losses...
B) If you had been reluctant to give up what you have because you do not want to suffer losses...
Are they both correct? |
Both are fine. The tense of the verb obviously changes the meaning, but the second sentence is fine if you're implying that you still have whatever it is. |
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bianca_dee
Joined: 14 Jun 2010 Location: United Kingdom
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Posted: Wed Jun 23, 2010 1:07 am Post subject: |
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It's almost fine. Just a minor correction for parallelism of the sentences.
A) If you had been reluctant to give up what you had because you did not want to suffer losses...
B) If you have been reluctant to give up what you have because you do not want to suffer losses...
I guess that's it.  |
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toph
Joined: 10 Jun 2010
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Posted: Wed Jun 23, 2010 6:58 pm Post subject: |
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Well, I would take out the word "because." Your sentence/story already conveys an implication by starting with "If you had/have..." so the word "because" is unnecessary. It's redundant, because by saying "If" you're setting up the story without the need for "because." But, you can replace "because" with "then." This would make more sense, and would change the sentence to a cause-effect story. Which follows the flow of the sentence anyway, because you begin with "If" so you can just make it an if-then sentence.
So I would write it like this:
1. If you (have/had) been reluctant to give up what you had, then you did not want to suffer losses...
Depending on your meaning, "have/had" can be used in this sentence. Have, if the person is STILL reluctant. Had, if the person is no longer reluctant.
2. If you (have/had) been reluctant to give up what you have, then you did not want to suffer losses...
"Have/had" can be used interchangeably here as well, depending on your meaning. |
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