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Modal Verbs : Shall versus Will
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<blockquote data-quote="Fırat" data-source="post: 2059" data-attributes="member: 34"><p>People may sometimes tell you that there is no difference between <strong>shall </strong>and <strong>will</strong>, or even that today nobody uses <strong>shall </strong>(except in offers such as "Shall I call a taxi?"). This is not really true. The difference between <strong>shall </strong>and <strong>will </strong>is often hidden by the fact that we usually contract them in speaking with '<strong>ll</strong>. But the difference does exist.</p><p></p><p><span style="color: seagreen"><strong>The truth is that there are two conjugations for the verb will:</strong></span></p><p></p><p><img src="http://forum.akademikpersonel.org/firat/Grammer/Modal%20Verbs%20%20Shall%20versus%20Will/Modal%20Verbs%20%20Shall%20versus%20Will.gif" alt="" class="fr-fic fr-dii fr-draggable " style="" /></p><p></p><p><img src="http://forum.akademikpersonel.org/firat/Grammer/Modal%20Verbs%20%20Shall%20versus%20Will/Modal%20Verbs%20%20Shall%20versus%20Will%202.gif" alt="" class="fr-fic fr-dii fr-draggable " style="" /></p><p></p><p>It is true that this difference is not universally recognized. However, let those who make assertions such as "People in the USA never use 'shall'" peruse a good US English dictionary, or many US legal documents which often contain phrases such as:</p><p></p><p> *<strong> Each party shall</strong> give one month's notice in writing in the event of termination.</p><p></p><p>Note that exactly the same rule applies in the case of should and would. It is perfectly normal, and somewhat more elegant, to write, <span style="color: red">for example:</span></p><p></p><p> * <strong>I should</strong> be grateful if <strong>you would</strong> kindly send me your latest catalogue.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Fırat, post: 2059, member: 34"] People may sometimes tell you that there is no difference between [B]shall [/B]and [B]will[/B], or even that today nobody uses [B]shall [/B](except in offers such as "Shall I call a taxi?"). This is not really true. The difference between [B]shall [/B]and [B]will [/B]is often hidden by the fact that we usually contract them in speaking with '[B]ll[/B]. But the difference does exist. [COLOR="seagreen"][B]The truth is that there are two conjugations for the verb will:[/B][/COLOR] [IMG]http://forum.akademikpersonel.org/firat/Grammer/Modal%20Verbs%20%20Shall%20versus%20Will/Modal%20Verbs%20%20Shall%20versus%20Will.gif[/IMG] [IMG]http://forum.akademikpersonel.org/firat/Grammer/Modal%20Verbs%20%20Shall%20versus%20Will/Modal%20Verbs%20%20Shall%20versus%20Will%202.gif[/IMG] It is true that this difference is not universally recognized. However, let those who make assertions such as "People in the USA never use 'shall'" peruse a good US English dictionary, or many US legal documents which often contain phrases such as: *[B] Each party shall[/B] give one month's notice in writing in the event of termination. Note that exactly the same rule applies in the case of should and would. It is perfectly normal, and somewhat more elegant, to write, [COLOR="red"]for example:[/COLOR] * [B]I should[/B] be grateful if [B]you would[/B] kindly send me your latest catalogue. [/QUOTE]
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YDS - Dil Eğitimi
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Modal Verbs : Shall versus Will
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