[Grammar] you'd a gone into

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MEHRANQ

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the context is from a flying tutorial and his friend was worried about left wing:

"i'm gonna have you dip that left wing. That's the one that worries me. it's always acted up a bit.
Yeap. you'd a gone into a full on barrel roll by now if something was wrong."

it's a conditional sentence but can you explain the bloded part grammatically? ("would+a+gone" is weird for me)

thanks in advance
 
Welcome to the forum. :)
the context is from a flying tutorial
Please provide a proper reference and a link if possible.

you'd a gone into

That should be "You would have gone into", which can be abbreviated to "You would've gone into", and which in speech can sound like "you would ə gone into".
 
In casual speech we often contract things or leave things out.
 
Welcome to the forum. :)

Please provide a proper reference and a link if possible.



That should be "You would have gone into", which can be abbreviated to "You would've gone into", and which in speech can sound like "you would ə gone into".

Thank You so much Teacher, i got my answer now.
 
Thank you so much teacher. I got my answer now.
You're welcome, and note my corrections. Do you know about capitalization in English?
 
The text is from a flying tutorial, and his friend was worried about the left wing:

"I'm gonna have you dip that left wing. That's the one that worries me. It's always acted up a bit.
[strike]Yeap.[/strike] Yep. You'd a gone into a full on barrel roll by now if something was wrong."

It's a conditional sentence, but can you explain the bolded part grammatically? ("would+a+gone" is weird for me)

My suggestions.
 
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You're welcome, and note my corrections. Do you know about capitalization in English?

Yes teacher i'm acquainted with it.
 
Yes, [STRIKE]teacher[/STRIKE] teechar, I'm acquainted with it.

Please note my corrections above.

There is little point in being acquainted with capitalisation if you're not going to use it. You must capitalise the word "I" (first person singular pronoun) every time you write it, no matter where it comes in the sentence.

Remember to copy other people's usernames correctly. The responder you were addressing is called "teechar". If you actually wrote "teacher" on purpose, please note that we don't address people that way here. Use a username or nothing.
 
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