Tony_M
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- Sep 17, 2024
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There is no other person. They review two different cars.Did the other person actually work at Rolls Royce in the 1970s?
Ah, so he used "you" to mean "one". In that case, I think "if you'd worked at" would have been better. Bear in mind that when people are speaking, they don't always consider the grammatical correctness of their utterances.There is no other person. They are reviewing two different cars.
Why is it not "had worked"?
What do you mean by that?Because it's a real past condition, not an unreal one.
Why is "would have been fired" in the result clause?Real past conditionals don't use the past perfect, just the simple past.
Why is "would have been fired" in the result clause?
When we have something like this:Because it's the result. Why would you think it isn't?
Tell me in greater depth what's puzzling you here.
Not quite.Does that address your question?
Yes, it's like guessing. Video.(I'm not sure exactly what you're asking, by the way, Tony. What do you think it means? Do you think it's another example of a drift from real to unreal?)
Why can't I use the same approach in a conditional sentence?This is a use of 'would' to provide what I call an 'authoritative answer' or sometimes an 'expert' answer.
Okay. I don't understand anything now.You can. One might imagine that you're a historian or something.
Obviously, that's not actually the case with the original James May utterance, though.
I thought we'd got there! Try asking again. What is it that doesn't make sense?
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