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Is this sentence grammatically OK? ''She exercises so that she will remain healthy.'' Last week my students asked me if they could use ''so that'' and ''will'' instead of ''to'' to express purpose. I was not sure whether it's correct or not. I would be grateful if you helped me with this.
26 de feb. de 2017 20:39
Respuestas · 11
2
The sentence makes sense, but "She exercises to remain healthy" is more concise and sounds a bit better.
26 de febrero de 2017
2
Yes, it is perfectly good grammar and also not uncommon to be used.
26 de febrero de 2017
1
Hi Ghasedek, Your sentence is grammatically sound. You are using "so that" to indicate purpose or cause and effect Xxx (action/cause) so that YYy (result/effect). Action: She exercises. Effect: She will remain healthy. Hope this helps. Cheers,Lance
26 de febrero de 2017
1
Yes, both are ok. In addition, sometimes we omit "that". So a third option would be: ''She exercises so she will remain healthy.''
26 de febrero de 2017
1
It's grammatically fine, but more of a mouthful instead of "to remain". It's OK in formal literary English, but in regular English it sounds like a few unnecessary words are in the phrase. If your lesson was on infinitives of purpose, then the student should be practising that.
26 de febrero de 2017
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