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Shana
Hi! In the following sentence, does "can" have to be "can"? Can "could" be an option? I am thinking if there is a conventional or grammatical rule for thisšØ
"Whether he was doomed, you can never tell"
13 mars 2024 06:51
Réponses · 11
1
āCouldā is actually better because it expresses more uncertainty. Since you said āwhetherā, you have made things uncertain. Thatās why ācouldā is better than ācanā.
13 mars 2024
āCouldā is possible but changes the meaning in an important way.
Whether he was doomed, you couldnāt tell. (You are making the determination of his status in the past)
Whether he was doomed, you canāt tell. (You are making the determination now)
Replacing ānotā with āneverā extends the time period.
You can never tell. (Now, and in the future)
You could never tell. (In the past, and after that time in the past)
13 mars 2024
"could" is often used as a past version of "can". Given that "was doomed" appears like we are talking about the past, I would prefer "could".
13 mars 2024
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Shana
CompƩtences linguistiques
Chinois (mandarin), Chinois (cantonais), Anglais, Japonais
Langue ƩtudiƩe
Anglais, Japonais
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