00:43
@snailplane Interesting! -- I can see that all of them are in either transcripts or novels, but again, it's clear that to the transcript writers and the writers, the period is the choice.
@snailplane Howdy! is a bit different, I suppose.
We still write It's, He's, ... in contrast to gonna, gotta, ...
I think Howdy! is somewhat like gonna, gotta, and friends.
But the line is probably not that clear.
I suppose asking if How do you do is a question may have the same effect as asking how many words It's or He's has.
To most learners, I'd say the technical side of these is less important than the practical side of the usage.
I followed some links from here to the main site, and I had to dig up some old revisions to understand what was going on!
> According to this information (Source) there are three conditions when we can't omit that
...
I followed the link to the source and found that the source says an entirely different thing!
> As a general rule, if the sentence feels just as good without the that, if no ambiguity results from its omission, if the sentence is more efficient or elegant without it, then we can safely omit the that. Theodore Bernstein lists three conditions in which we should maintain the conjunction that:
See how we jumped from should maintain to can't omit?
(It looked rather bad when I saw can't omit, which made me think the source must've been a bad site too.)
Hmm... I don't know why this answer's got 5 upvotes because it doesn't address the real question of the question, which is the choice of tense after
until, not the one after
will have. -- To make it more obvious using your example, why didn't you use
By the time he got home, he will have played for six hours hours in the park in your example like the example in the question does? —
Damkerng T. 21 secs ago
It makes me think (sorry, I'm gonna be blunt), do we read?
Now I wonder if I should downvote the answer to compensate the +5?
@M.A.R. I think his point is valid, and you sure know this. :-) -- BTW, what about arsenic? I'm not sure what you meant
@Brock Looks like @userr2684291 handled your question very well. :-)
It's an interesting video.
I don't know why, but I think I lost my attention in less than 10 seconds.
Maybe it was the pace of her speech, which was obviously too slow, or maybe it was another X-factor, which I think relates to which kind of medium is better to convey which kind of information.
I think in this case, books trump videos.
A window you need to deal with before the return to the form? Sorry, wrong stack. —
Stephen S 3 hours ago