What is the purpose of “if clauses” and why is it sometimes used?

I am an Oxford English Grammar student: He won’t come tomorrow if he

came yesterday. Please pray that he comes on Tuesday.

I want to know more explanation about this question. What are conditional determinants? “Future tense” is my favourite “past tense” in “if sentence”. How do you distinguish it?

Thank you

so much.

Asked on February 27, 2021 in Other.
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1 Answer(s)

And he won’t come tomorrow so should go to hospital.

If he were to say he won’t come tomorrow, he would be so glad.

This form of if can be semantically equivalent to “since” or “given (the fact)”:

He won’t come tomorrow, since he came yesterday.

He came yesterday so will not come tomorrow. She is to get killed anyway.

What you have to do now is ask your

guy if he has made his weekly last week visit. There’s no reason to expect him to come back tomorrow, given the fact he was here yesterday.

Why is he back in Detroit today?

How coming to the train for a ride south of

us is the theory that our train was broken down some mile. If it was not, wouldn’t it arrive on time?

Where the future tense won’t refer to what will not take place if it turns out that the train did break down. When will the

whole train fail to get stopped, when and why?

Answered on February 27, 2021.
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