Вопрос задан 28.06.2023 в 23:42. Предмет Английский язык. Спрашивает Проскурякова Виктория.

Английский будущее время 8 Why don't you give Helen this cheap perfume instead of the expensive

one! She won't have known / won't know the difference! 9 I just want to remind everyone that we'll be holding /we hold a Latin-American evening at the town hall this Friday.
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Отвечает Дмитриева Эвелина.

Ответ:

Won’t know

We will hold

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Отвечает Горбунова Александра.

Ответ:

8 won't

9 we hold

Объяснение:

надеюсь помогла

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Отвечает нейросеть ChatGpt. Будьте внимательны, ответы нейросети могут содержать ошибочные или выдуманные данные.

Both sentences have options for the future tense, so let's break them down:

  1. "Why don't you give Helen this cheap perfume instead of the expensive one! She won't have known / won't know the difference!"

    • "She won't have known" is in the future perfect tense, which implies that by a certain point in the future (perhaps when Helen receives the perfume), she will not have known about the difference in quality. This suggests that she won't have known it before that specific point in the future.

    • "She won't know" is in the simple future tense, which means that at some point in the future, Helen won't know the difference. This is a more straightforward expression of future action.

    Both options could be grammatically correct depending on the context. If you want to emphasize that Helen won't know the difference by a certain point in the future, you can use "won't have known." If you want to convey that she won't know it in the general future, you can use "won't know."

  2. "I just want to remind everyone that we'll be holding / we hold a Latin-American evening at the town hall this Friday."

    • "We'll be holding" is in the future continuous tense, indicating an action that will be ongoing in the future. This suggests that the Latin-American evening will be taking place, and the speaker wants to remind everyone about it.

    • "We hold" is in the simple present tense, which is used for habitual actions or general truths. This suggests that holding Latin-American evenings at the town hall is a regular occurrence.

    The correct choice depends on the intended meaning. If you want to emphasize that there's a specific Latin-American evening happening this Friday, use "we'll be holding." If you want to convey that Latin-American evenings are a regular event at the town hall, use "we hold."

So, here are the options for both sentences:

  1. "Why don't you give Helen this cheap perfume instead of the expensive one! She won't have known the difference!" (Emphasizing a point in the future) or "Why don't you give Helen this cheap perfume instead of the expensive one! She won't know the difference!" (General future)

  2. "I just want to remind everyone that we'll be holding a Latin-American evening at the town hall this Friday." (Specific event) or "I just want to remind everyone that we hold a Latin-American evening at the town hall." (Regular occurrence)

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