What should ne demek




















If you say that something should not have happened, you mean that it did happen, but that you wish it had not. I should have gone this morning but I was feeling a bit ill You should have written to the area manager again I shouldn't have said what I did Indicates a recommendation With respect to implementations, the word "should" is to be interpreted as an implementation recommendation, but not a requirement With respect to documents, the word "should" is to be interpreted as recommended programming practice for documents and a requirement for Strictly Conforming XHTML Documents be included Term used to indicate provisions which are not mandatory but which are desirable as good practice The subject of the sentence is likely to execute the sentence predicate vagueness You use should in expressions such as I should think and I should imagine to indicate that you think something is true but you are not sure.

He raised his glass and indicated that I should do the same My father was very keen that I should fulfill my potential You use should in conditional clauses when you are talking about things that might happen.

If you should be fired, your health and pension benefits will not be automatically cut off Should you buy a home from Lovell, the company promises to buy it back at the same price after three years You use should when you are saying that something is probably the case or will probably happen in the way you are describing. If you say that something should have happened by a particular time, you mean that it will probably have happened by that time.

You should have no problem with reading this language The doctor said it will take six weeks and I should be fine by then Indicates an advisory recommendation that is to be applied when practicable If; in case of You use should to give someone an order to do something, or to report an official order.

All visitors should register with the British Embassy The European Commission ruled that British Aerospace should pay back tens of millions of pounds emphasis You use should in expressions such as You should have seen us and You should have heard him to emphasize how funny, shocking, or impressive something that you experienced was. You should have heard him last night! I should look out if I were you! Should I or shouldn't I go to university? Please could you advise me what I should do?

Should I go back to the motel and wait for you to telephone? You should be so lucky!. I should not have it was not right that I did -, it would have been better if I did not - as it should be as is proper, as is fit, as is suitable if anything should happen to if if something bad should happen to It is used with the base form of a verb shall As an auxiliary, shall indicates a duty or necessity whose obligation is derived from the person speaking; as, you shall go; he shall go; that is, I order or promise your going shall The term shall denotes a mandatory requirement shall "Do you require or promise his going?

Shall I get the keys? Shall I telephone her and ask her to come here? Well, shall we go? Let's have a nice little stroll, shall we? What shall I do? Well, we shall look forward to seeing him tomorrow shall Indicates that a statement is mandatory shall You use shall to indicate that something must happen, usually because of a rule or Hukuk You use shall not to indicate that something must not happen.

The president shall hold office for five years shall After a conditional conjunction as if, whether shall is used in all persons to express futurity simply; as, if I, you, or he shall say they are right the way it should be done as it ought to be done, done properly, done well why should I? Why should I be the one to go?

Ne diye gideyim? Tell you what, let's stay here another day Part of the TQL Syntax The What string denotes the fields whose values you wish returned The possible fields differ amongst the tables dua emphasis You use what in exclamations to emphasize an opinion or reaction. What a horrible thing to do What a busy day. What is also a determiner. What ugly things; throw them away, throw them away What great news, Jakki You use what in questions when you ask for specific information about something that you do not know.

What do you want? What are you doing? What time is it? Guess what? I'm going to dinner at Mrs. Combley's tonight Whatever; whatsoever; what thing soever; used indefinitely an expression of surprise or disbelief Something; thing; stuff Used adjectively, equivalent to the Que? Que te parece? Que significa? Que es esto? Como se llama usted? Como te llamas? Que hora es?

Que tiempo hace? Que hay? Look at that moon. Is that beautiful or what? Am I wasting my time here, or what? Inmetco is a coal-based process similar to FASTMET that uses iron oxide fines and pulverized coal to produce a scrap substitute Mill scale and flue dust, inexpensive byproducts of steelmaking, can be mixed with the iron oxide fines Inmetco, unlike other direct reduction products, is intended to be hot charged into an EAF, with attendant energy savings emphasis You use what at the beginning of a clause in structures where you are changing the order of the information to give special emphasis to something.

What what? Collateral Security on my investment I can't bear to see the way he has brutalized you Who had whatted me? Sometimes prefixed to adjectives in an adverbial sense, as nearly equivalent to how; as, what happy boys!

As a relative pronoun Used substantively with the antecedent suppressed, equivalent to that which, or those [persons] who, or those [things] which; called a compound relative which; which kind of Why?

For what purpose? On what account? You have to know what's what and when to draw the line You should come across the river with us. What if this doesn't work out? You use what after certain words, especially verbs and adjectives, when you are referring to a situation that is unknown or has not been specified. You can imagine what it would be like driving a car into a brick wall at 30 miles an hour I want to know what happened to Norman Do you know what those idiots have done?

We had never seen anything like it before and could not see what to do next She turned scarlet from embarrassment, once she realized what she had done. I didn't know what college I wanted to go to I didn't know what else to say. He drinks what is left in his glass as if it were water What is also a determiner. They had had to use what money they had. You use what to indicate that you are making a guess about something such as an amount or value.

Now you've talked about work on daffodils, what about other commercially important flowers, like roses? So many things are unsafe these days -- milk, cranberry sauce, what have you My great-grandfather made horseshoes and nails and what have you [mostly British colloquialism]: greeting archaic You use what about at the beginning of a question when you make a suggestion, offer, or request.

What about going out with me tomorrow? What's so special about that?



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000