will x 2
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will x 2
What's your opinion on the sentence marked by asterisks below?
...............
Mark stared at him fiercely. "I'm trying to save his life, okay? Maybe, just maybe, he'll see that this is not working, and maybe he'll decide he should wait or something. Why is that so hard to understand?"
"Because he's crazy. **If he'll kill himself, then he'll kill us. Why is that so hard to understand?"**
Excerpt from John Grisham's The Client.
...............
Mark stared at him fiercely. "I'm trying to save his life, okay? Maybe, just maybe, he'll see that this is not working, and maybe he'll decide he should wait or something. Why is that so hard to understand?"
"Because he's crazy. **If he'll kill himself, then he'll kill us. Why is that so hard to understand?"**
Excerpt from John Grisham's The Client.
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Metal wrote:
The first will does not so much refer to future action, but to volition. However, I can't get the idea of of my head that it it's something he would already have had to have done to prove the volition and if he's killed himself, he can't kill us.
Grisham's statement is at best awkward. Better would be, "If he's willing to kill himself, I'm sure he wouldn't hessitate to kill us." Then again, he's building charactors, and this is what one of his charactors says. People sometimes use awkward or ungrammatical sentences in real life. Maybe he's just reflecting that fact.
A more common statement is, "If he'll do that, he'll do anything." This does at least show that "will" can be in both clauses.
This does, however, beg the question as to just what conditional this is. Is this another nail in the coffin for the numbered conditionals?
The best killer of the numbered conditionals has to be:
"Your money back if not completely satisfied," however. No verbs!
Not acceptable but not because will+inf in both clauses."Because he's crazy. **If he'll kill himself, then he'll kill us. Why is that so hard to understand?"**
The first will does not so much refer to future action, but to volition. However, I can't get the idea of of my head that it it's something he would already have had to have done to prove the volition and if he's killed himself, he can't kill us.
Grisham's statement is at best awkward. Better would be, "If he's willing to kill himself, I'm sure he wouldn't hessitate to kill us." Then again, he's building charactors, and this is what one of his charactors says. People sometimes use awkward or ungrammatical sentences in real life. Maybe he's just reflecting that fact.
A more common statement is, "If he'll do that, he'll do anything." This does at least show that "will" can be in both clauses.
This does, however, beg the question as to just what conditional this is. Is this another nail in the coffin for the numbered conditionals?
The best killer of the numbered conditionals has to be:
"Your money back if not completely satisfied," however. No verbs!
Last edited by Andrew Patterson on Tue Jul 19, 2005 5:52 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Are you sure this isn't will expressing volition? I take the sentence to mean "If he is prepared/willing to kill himself, then he is capable of killing us". I find it acceptable.
Numbered conditionals may be dead but they are still stumbling around like restless zombies, their fetid, rotting carcases stinking out too many EFL classrooms.
Numbered conditionals may be dead but they are still stumbling around like restless zombies, their fetid, rotting carcases stinking out too many EFL classrooms.
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lolwhites wrote:
Lolwhites, I'm sure that it is expressing volition, I find the expression awkward, however. Perhaps the way I put it was awkward too.Are you sure this isn't will expressing volition? I take the sentence to mean "If he is prepared/willing to kill himself, then he is capable of killing us". I find it a bit awkward, but acceptable.
Andrew Patterson wrote:Metal wrote:Not acceptable but not because will+inf in both clauses."Because he's crazy. **If he'll kill himself, then he'll kill us. Why is that so hard to understand?"**
The first will does not so much refer to to future action, but to volition. However, I can't get the idea of of my head that it it's something he would already have had to have done to prove the volition and if he's killed himself, he can't kill us.
Grisham's statement is at best awkward. Better would be, "If he's willing to kill himself, I'm sure he wouldn't hessitate to kill us." Then again, he's building charactors, and this is what one of his charactors says. People sometimes use awkward or ungrammatical sentences in real life. Maybe he's just reflecting that fact.
A more common statement is, "If he'll do that, he'll do anything." This does at least show that "will" can be in both clauses.
This does, however, beg the question as to just what conditional this is. Is this another nail in the coffin for the numbered conditionals?
The best killer of the numbered conditionals has to be:
"Your money back if not completely satisfied," however. No verbs!
I couldn't imagine my public school educated, 14-year-old son saying it that way. Sounds extremely writerly, semi-formal and not quite casual spoken English."If he's willing to kill himself, I'm sure he wouldn't hessitate to kill us."
Me too.lolwhites wrote:Are you sure this isn't will expressing volition? I take the sentence to mean "If he is prepared/willing to kill himself, then he is capable of killing us". I find it acceptable.
If he will take accept a free spliff whenever it is offered (volition-present), he will definitely accept any stronger drug under the same circumstances (volition-future).
"Will" over "would" because the speaker see the referent's willingness to accept any drug offered as more factual.
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