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I will have no father, if you be not he Is it a normal and common conditional sentence? Can we use this method in daily conversation? Please explain. For instance, is the following phrase correct?: I will do nothing, I you be not here. Thank you.
20 de abr de 2016 20:18
Respostas · 12
2
No, that sentence structure is archaic and no longer used. It is only found in older literature (from around four hunded years ago). Your first sentence is expressing the equivalent of the idea that today would be said as : "If you are not my father, then I don't have a father." The only possible modern usage would be in poetry. Your sentence is incorrect. If you want the proper archaic structure it would be : "I will do nothing if you be not here." or " I will do nothing if you not be here." Nobody would ever say this, however, we say : " I won't do anything if you're not here."
20 de abril de 2016
1
I will do nothing, AN you be not here. Perfectly correct 400 years ago.
21 de abril de 2016
1
See this quote from Shakespeare: "...God save the king! although I be not he; And yet, amen, if heaven do think him me." Grammar vocabulary and syntax are very different in older forms of English. ".... although I am not king, and yet, amen, if heaven (God) thinks I am." would be a modern way of writing it.
20 de abril de 2016
1
You are attempting to produce a first conditional sentence. The clause with "if" uses a verb in the present simple tense, which for "to be", means either am, is or are. In this case, "you are". e.g. If you help me, I will give you chocolate. Your sentence feels odd and the meaning is a little unclear. I think you are talking more about theoretical logic (and not a specific situation), in which case a zero conditional sentence would be appropriate e.g. "If you are not my father, then no one is".
20 de abril de 2016
I will have no one that I can consider as a father if it is not you.
20 de abril de 2016
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