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should




Should 1- . . . Indefinite (Future in the Past). should+ :

I promised them that I should come on Monday. , .

Should Indefinite Perfect 1- . . . . . ( + ):

I should do it tomorrow. .


Should Indefinite Perfect . should :

demanded that the letter should be posted immediately. , .

Should Indefinite Perfect , ( Infinitive Indefinite) , ( Infinitive Perfect):

should be more attentive.

.

should have been more attentive.

.

should like+ , :

I should like to speak to him.

.

1. . should.

1. We did not know that we should be asked to take part in the Conference.

2. One should be conscious of one's faults.

3. Should she ask you for my address, give it to her.

4. I know I should have done it long ago.

5. Why should you stay here all day long?

6. We are of an opinion that he should leave Leningrad for good.

7. You shouldn't have said so!

8. I told him that I should let him know the date of the examination.

9. If I were you, I shouldn't speak about it at all.


10. You should have come earlier, the lesson is over now.

11. It's a lucky coincidence that she should come here today.

12. Is it absolutely necessary that you should stay here so late?

13. One should think before one speaks.

14. We hoped that we should come in time.

2. . should.

1. Since these two sounds differ only in the fact that one employs voice while the other is merely a whispered or breathed sound, it does not seem very strange that they should have been thus represented by the same character.

2. His irritable demand that he should be left alone was quite characteristic of him.

 

3. Room had however been found for him, should he want it.

4. In considering some of the problems peculiar to the portraiture, it should be remembered that the idea of resemblance is not always the same for the artist and for the layman.

5. All community and labour organizations should support the teachers in their effort to obtain their rights.

6. It is natural that words of Scandinavian origin should be plentiful in the areas covered by the Danelaw,7 and such words are most common in the North and the East Midlands.

7. Yet, amid these many references to the classical tongues, it should not be forgotten that the language under discussion is English, and that English is spoken by about two hundred and twenty five million people, of whom only fifty million live in Britain.

8. The student of Japanese history, in any of its branches, should note well the two dates which stand at the head of this chapter.

9. There is a certain difficulty in deciding whether many Greek words should be described as coming directly, or through Latin.

7 Danelaw ['delnlo:] - , IXX ., , .

14J


10. Should a case arise which cannot be settled by village authorities, the aggrieved person may petition the Wali for permission to sue.





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