📍[4] "By the time the audit team reaches the headquarters, the financial report will have already been submitted."
👉🏻The sentence is grammatically correct. It correctly combines the present tense in the subordinate (dependent) time clause with the future perfect tense in the main (independent) clause.
Here is a breakdown of why the grammar is correct:
👉🏻Present tense in the subordinate clause: When a clause begins with a time conjunction such as "by the time," "when," or "after," and refers to a future event, the present simple tense is used. In this case, the time clause is "By the time the audit team reaches the headquarters."
👉🏻Future perfect tense in the main clause: The future perfect tense (will have + past participle) is used to describe an action that will be completed before another specific point in the future. Here, the main clause is "the financial report will have already been submitted," indicating that the report will have been finished before the audit team arrives.
👉🏻Sequencing of events: The structure correctly shows the sequence of two future events: the submission of the report will be finished first, and the arrival of the audit team will happen later.
👉🏻The grammar in the sentence is correct. The sentence correctly uses the future perfect tense to describe a future action (the financial report being submitted) that will be completed before another future action (the audit team's arrival).
👉🏻Grammatical analysis
"By the time the audit team reaches...": The use of the present tense ("reaches") in the time clause is correct when referring to a future event. This clause sets the specific future deadline.
👉🏻"...the financial report will have already been submitted.": The main clause uses the future perfect tense ("will already have been submitted" in the passive voice) to show that the report's submission will be completed before the audit team arrives.
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SV RAMANUJ
👉🏻The sentence is grammatically correct. It correctly combines the present tense in the subordinate (dependent) time clause with the future perfect tense in the main (independent) clause.
Here is a breakdown of why the grammar is correct:
👉🏻Present tense in the subordinate clause: When a clause begins with a time conjunction such as "by the time," "when," or "after," and refers to a future event, the present simple tense is used. In this case, the time clause is "By the time the audit team reaches the headquarters."
👉🏻Future perfect tense in the main clause: The future perfect tense (will have + past participle) is used to describe an action that will be completed before another specific point in the future. Here, the main clause is "the financial report will have already been submitted," indicating that the report will have been finished before the audit team arrives.
👉🏻Sequencing of events: The structure correctly shows the sequence of two future events: the submission of the report will be finished first, and the arrival of the audit team will happen later.
👉🏻The grammar in the sentence is correct. The sentence correctly uses the future perfect tense to describe a future action (the financial report being submitted) that will be completed before another future action (the audit team's arrival).
👉🏻Grammatical analysis
"By the time the audit team reaches...": The use of the present tense ("reaches") in the time clause is correct when referring to a future event. This clause sets the specific future deadline.
👉🏻"...the financial report will have already been submitted.": The main clause uses the future perfect tense ("will already have been submitted" in the passive voice) to show that the report's submission will be completed before the audit team arrives.
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SV RAMANUJ
📍[2] "Rarely do you come across someone so dedicated."
The sentence is grammatically correct and is an example of inversion, which is used for emphasis.
👉🏻Explanation of the grammar rule
The standard word order for a simple statement is: subject + verb + rest of the sentence.
👉🏻Standard structure: You rarely come across someone so dedicated.
However, when you begin a sentence with certain negative or restrictive adverbs like rarely, seldom, hardly ever, or never, the subject and auxiliary verb are inverted, or swapped, to create emphasis. This is similar to the structure used for a question.
👉🏻Emphatic structure: Rarely do you come across someone so dedicated.
In this case:
Rarely is the adverb at the start, which triggers the inversion.
Do is the auxiliary verb that moves to the front of the subject.
You is the subject.
Come is the main verb, which follows the subject.
👉🏻This inversion gives the sentence a more formal or literary tone.
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The sentence is grammatically correct and uses a feature called negative adverbial inversion. This construction places a negative or restrictive adverb at the beginning of the sentence for emphasis, which reverses the usual subject-verb word order.
👉🏻Breakdown of the sentence
🔹Normal word order: You rarely come across someone so dedicated.
🔹Inverted word order: Rarely do you come across someone so dedicated.
👉🏻Rules of negative adverbial inversion
🔹Adverbial first: The sentence begins with a negative or restrictive adverb, such as rarely, seldom, never, hardly, scarcely, or little.
🔹Auxiliary verb next: An auxiliary verb (also called a helping verb) is placed before the subject.
👉🏻If the main verb is in the simple present tense and there is no other auxiliary verb, you add a form of the verb do (do, does, did).
👉🏻If the sentence already has an auxiliary verb (have, can, must), that is the verb that is inverted with the subject.
📌Emphasis: This structure is used in more formal or literary contexts to create a strong, emphatic effect.
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SV RAMANUJ
The sentence is grammatically correct and is an example of inversion, which is used for emphasis.
👉🏻Explanation of the grammar rule
The standard word order for a simple statement is: subject + verb + rest of the sentence.
👉🏻Standard structure: You rarely come across someone so dedicated.
However, when you begin a sentence with certain negative or restrictive adverbs like rarely, seldom, hardly ever, or never, the subject and auxiliary verb are inverted, or swapped, to create emphasis. This is similar to the structure used for a question.
👉🏻Emphatic structure: Rarely do you come across someone so dedicated.
In this case:
Rarely is the adverb at the start, which triggers the inversion.
Do is the auxiliary verb that moves to the front of the subject.
You is the subject.
Come is the main verb, which follows the subject.
👉🏻This inversion gives the sentence a more formal or literary tone.
➖➖➖➖➖
The sentence is grammatically correct and uses a feature called negative adverbial inversion. This construction places a negative or restrictive adverb at the beginning of the sentence for emphasis, which reverses the usual subject-verb word order.
👉🏻Breakdown of the sentence
🔹Normal word order: You rarely come across someone so dedicated.
🔹Inverted word order: Rarely do you come across someone so dedicated.
👉🏻Rules of negative adverbial inversion
🔹Adverbial first: The sentence begins with a negative or restrictive adverb, such as rarely, seldom, never, hardly, scarcely, or little.
🔹Auxiliary verb next: An auxiliary verb (also called a helping verb) is placed before the subject.
👉🏻If the main verb is in the simple present tense and there is no other auxiliary verb, you add a form of the verb do (do, does, did).
👉🏻If the sentence already has an auxiliary verb (have, can, must), that is the verb that is inverted with the subject.
📌Emphasis: This structure is used in more formal or literary contexts to create a strong, emphatic effect.
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SV RAMANUJ
COMMON ERRORS
50 SENTENCES SERIES
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1. Despite the team's well-thought strategy their efforts lacked coordination and consistency.
2. Rarely do you come across someone so dedicated.
3. They had lived in this city for ten years before they moved to the countryside.
4. By the time the audit team reaches the headquarters the financial report will have already been submitted.
5. The manager insisted that every member complete the survey before the deadline expired.
6. The team leader called up each employee separately but failed to bring out their actual grievances.
7. She sings as well as a trained vocalist.
8. The CEO called off the meeting without giving out any reason.
9. He had never seen such a masterpiece until he visited the gallery last spring.
10. The professor's explanation was filled with clarity yet managed to obfuscate more than elucidate.
#CommonErrors
50 SENTENCES SERIES
➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖
1. Despite the team's well-thought strategy their efforts lacked coordination and consistency.
2. Rarely do you come across someone so dedicated.
3. They had lived in this city for ten years before they moved to the countryside.
4. By the time the audit team reaches the headquarters the financial report will have already been submitted.
5. The manager insisted that every member complete the survey before the deadline expired.
6. The team leader called up each employee separately but failed to bring out their actual grievances.
7. She sings as well as a trained vocalist.
8. The CEO called off the meeting without giving out any reason.
9. He had never seen such a masterpiece until he visited the gallery last spring.
10. The professor's explanation was filled with clarity yet managed to obfuscate more than elucidate.
#CommonErrors
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