Niwantha
Should it be "in the future" or "in future"? Have I used "if required" correctly here? Hi friends, I have 03 questions based on the following sentence. (Context: This sentence talks about managing employees' performance) " Let employees know exactly what they need to do in the future to reach the desired level of performance if required." 1) Should it be "in the future" or "in future"? 2) Have I used "if required" correctly in the sentence? I have put it at the end. 3) Is it understandable? Are there any grammar mistakes? Thanks in advance! Niwantha
5. März 2019 05:16
Antworten · 8
2
Let employees know exactly what they need to do in the future to reach the desired level of performance if required." 1) Should it be "in the future" or "in future"? Yes, either. Almost the same exact meaning in this sentence. "in the future" means at any time after now. "in future" brings in a sense of it having been different, not done, not the required level of performance, in the past. So this does not go so well with "if required". 2) Have I used "if required" correctly in the sentence? I have put it at the end. It works, if you mean "tell them, if required". "If required, let employees know exactly what they need to do in the future to reach the desired level of performance." would also work and not have any doubt about what the "if required" connects with. 3) Is it understandable? Are there any grammar mistakes? It is great.
5. März 2019
1
"Let employees know exactly what they need to do in the future to reach the desired level of performance." This is natural and understandable. Adding "if required" at the end is unnecessary and confusing. What meaning did you intend by adding it to the sentence?
5. März 2019
1
Adding to the other answers, my sense is that “in future” is more commonly used in British English, but rarely used in the US. In the US, “in the future” is much more common.
5. März 2019
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