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1 Post By philadelphia -
1 Post By 2006 -
1 Post By Raymott
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'the usage of Should'
Hi friends and teachers,
The sentence below seems no good to me. I got it from a memo.
"I should be glad if you could review attached document"
There is no obligation but she used 'should'. So, the using of 'should' confuses me.
Therefore, additional sentence below, from a poem, seems Ok to me.
"I know I should be glad that my husband and I have jobs, but I am so so tired of worrying about money."
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Re: 'the usage of Should'
*Not a teacher
It is like one compares oneself to an average person -the main stream. The average person is glad that his/her wife/husband and s/he have a job while you are not glad but you should [be as the average person is]. So, you do not act as most of people act
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Re: 'the usage of Should'

Originally Posted by
wq.denis
Hi friends and teachers,
The sentence below seems no good to me. I got it from a memo.
"I should be glad if you could review attached document"
There is no obligation but she used 'should'. So, the using of 'should' confuses me.
Therefore, additional sentence below, from a poem, seems Ok to me.
"I know I should be glad that my husband and I have jobs, but I am so so tired of worrying about money."
In your first sentence, 'should' doesn't have the meaning of obligation or 'ought to'. It's a hypothetical/conditional form of 'shall'.
"I will/shall be glad if you can read the document." (Not colloquial) ->
"I would/should be glad if you could read the document."
'Would' is used here much more frequently than 'should'.
In your second sentence, 'should' has the meaning of 'ought to', as you say.
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Re: 'the usage of Should'

Originally Posted by
Raymott
In your first sentence, 'should' doesn't have the meaning of obligation or 'ought to'. It's a hypothetical/conditional form of 'shall'.
"I will/shall be glad if you can read the document." (Not colloquial) ->
"I would/should be glad if you could read the document."
'Would' is used here much more frequently than 'should'.
In your second sentence, 'should' has the meaning of 'ought to', as you say.
Thank you so much for detailed explanation. I appreciated it.
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