If India would’ve made till here in 1947, let us leave it in 1950.

Is the sentence above correct? When the story of

a sports championship begins, it is about a sports championship.

Asked on November 23, 2021 in Grammar.
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1 Answer(s)

I will say “obviously” “not correct”. If India would’ve made till here, it’s a perfect sentence and therefore does not make sense without a context. “till” is usually associated with time (till now), so “till here” is not a good phrasing. To here, or its equivalent would be better. Similarly “could” makes better sense than “would”.

“Here” refers to a point in some playoff series, I suggest “If India had (or could have) made it to this point, then….” .

Answered on December 20, 2021.
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