A. Study these examples:
A: What time will you phone me
tomorrow?
B: I'll phone you when I get
home from work.
'I'll phone you when I get home
from work' is a sentence with two parts:
the main part: 'I'll phone you'
and the when-part: 'when I get
home from work (tomorrow)'
The time in the sentence is
future ('tomorrow') but we use a present tense (get) in the when part of the
sentence.
We do not use will in the
when-part of the sentence:
* We'll go out when it stops
raining. (not 'when it will stop')
* When you are in London again,
you must come and see us. (not 'when you will be')
* (said to a child) What do you
want to be when you grow up? (not 'will grow')
The same thing happens after:
while before after
as soon as until or till
* I'm going to read a lot of
books while I'm on holiday. (not 'while I will be')
* I'm going back home on Sunday.
Before I go, I'd like to visit the museum.
* Wait here until (or till) I
come back.
B. You can also use the
present perfect (have done) after when/after/until/as soon as:
* Can I borrow that book when
you've finished it?
* Don't say anything while Ian
is here. Wait until he has gone.
It is often possible to use the
present simple or the present perfect:
* I'll come as soon as I finish.
or I'll come as soon as I've finished.
* You'll feel better after you
have something to eat. or You'll feel
better after you've had something to eat.
But do not use the present
perfect if two things happen together. The present perfect shows that one thing
will be complete before the other (so the two things do not happen together).
Compare:
* When I've phoned Kate, we can
have dinner. (= First I'll phone Kate and after that we can have dinner.)
but * When I phone Kate this
evening, I'll invite her to the party. (not 'when I've phoned') (In this
example, the two things happen together.)
C. After if, we normally use
the present simple (if I do/if I see etc.) for the future:
* It's raining hard. We'll get
wet if we go out. (not 'if we will go')
* Hurry up! If we don't hurry,
we'll be late.
Compare when and if:
We use when for things which are
sure to happen:
* I'm going shopping this
afternoon. (for sure) When I go shopping, I'll buy some food.
We use if (not 'when') for
things that will possibly happen:
* I might go shopping this
afternoon. (it's possible) If I go shopping, I'll buy some food.
* If it is raining this evening,
I won't go out. (not 'when it is raining')
* Don't worry if I'm late
tonight. (not 'when I'm late')
* If they don't come soon, I'm
not going to wait. (not 'when they don't come')
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