搜尋自 英語 {1} 教師……
Pelin
Which one is OK?
Someone just came without advance notice.
I wish you had let me know before you came.
I wish you would have let me know before you came.
2026年2月17日 17:29
解答 · 5
Hello, Pelin 😃
I need to urgently clarify something I recently said/wrote here: When I said the second sentence I was taking the first sentence to be:
1) Someone just came here without advance notice.
2) I wish you had let me know before you came. Correct 😃
3) I wish you " have" let me know before you came. 🫢😦🙄Incorrect!/wrong.
This last sentence sounds awkward and unnatural to me as a native English speaker!
Writing this as a positive request instead of a complaint, you can say:
Please let me know before you come next time.
Or Please let me know beforehand/in advance, next time you decide to come.
I hope this helps you 😃
2026年2月18日 19:33
When I said the second sentence I was taking
2026年2月18日 19:18
I would do the first one, but both work
2026年2月17日 21:38
Hello Pelin. 😀
Your second sentence is correct.😀
You can also say:
● Someone just came without letting me know beforehand.
● Someone just arrived without warning.
● Someone just came/arrived without prior notice.
I hope this helps you 😀
2026年2月17日 21:09
In British English, only the first is correct and the second is utterly incorrect. I have heard the second in American English. I'm not sure how standard it is.
2026年2月17日 19:29
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