English Language & Usage Asked by JohnJ on August 5, 2021
I seriously can’t tell which sounds natural in English. Need some help.
a) From tomorrow on, she’ll be coming to our place to work with us.
b) She’ll be coming to our place to work with us, from tomorrow on.
If there are better answers, suggestions, anything is welcome.
Not a must but preferable:
I hear sentences similar to the first one more often in a natural context, and indeed, that modifier you are adding is in regards to "she," so you want to make the modifier as close to the subject as possible for clarity. I would, however, in regards to what is natural, say "starting tomorrow" instead of "from tomorrow on"; the former is more casual.
Answered by BigRigz on August 5, 2021
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