I am following your recommendation from March.
Can this sentence mean two things:
1-From March on, I will follow your recommendation.
2-I am following the recommendation you made in March.
Gratefully,
Navi,
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I am following your recommendation from March.
Can this sentence mean two things:
1-From March on, I will follow your recommendation.
2-I am following the recommendation you made in March.
Gratefully,
Navi,
They mean two different things:
1. It is not yet March. When March comes, I will start to follow your recommendation (we have no idea when that recommendation was made).
2. March is now in the past. Whatever month it is now, I am currently following a recommendation which you made in the previous March.
If your main sentence is "I am following your recommendation from March", then only sentence 2 has the same meaning.
Thank you Emsr2d2,
Now if the sentence were
A-I will follow your recommendation from March.
it would be ambiguous, wouldn't it?
Gratefully,
Navi.