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Kathy
About the past continuous tense
"The forecast said it was going to be hot and sunny tomorrow."
With this sentence, the hot and sunny weather will happen on tomorrow, so why use "was going" but not "will"?
thanks!
Jun 28, 2018 9:56 AM
Answers · 4
2
Have you studied reported speech, Kathy? This is a straightforward example of reported/indirect speech.
When we report something that someone has said, we take it one step back into the past.
Direct speech - Weatherman: "It is going to be hot and sunny tomorrow" ( 'is going to' = future)
Indirect speech - The forecast said that it was going to be hot and sunny tomorrow ( 'was going to" = future in the past)
June 28, 2018
1
Hello) We use "is going to" when we are partly sure what it will happen. It means that a forecast has unique data of a following day. However, we use "will" if it is just a prediction, a promise, a simple action which happens every day, or we have decided something right now and say " ok, we will meet or I will call you"
June 28, 2018
1
it is the same) bacause you should have the right tense order in the sentence.
look,
she said( Past) - in the second part you should use( Past perfect tense)
but
She says ( present) - the the second part you should use ( past)
You can't use will. probably you can use would.
1) you say- you said
2) you said- you have said
3) you are going - you were going
4)you have gone- you had gone
5)you had gone- you had gone ( the same)
June 28, 2018
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Kathy
Language Skills
Chinese (Cantonese), English
Learning Language
English
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