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		Ask for help > Which one is correct?     
			
		 Which one is correct? 
		
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 yanakoleva77
 
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							| Which one is correct? 
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							| Can you help me , please? Which one is correct?  I hope I �m chosen for the school team.       1. You haven �t got a hope.        2. Congratulations!      |  18 Apr 2016      
					
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 MoodyMoody
 
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							| The first one is closer. The second one means that you have already been chosen. However, the more idiomatic saying for the first is "You haven �t got a prayer," not hope. You could say instead, "There �s no hope for you." Speaking of hope, I hope this answers your question. |  18 Apr 2016     
					
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 leaponover
 
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							| Moody �s information is spot on.  Less idiomatic is "You haven �t got a chance" as well.  The first one seems like a non native who tried to mimic the expression but it got lost in translation. |  18 Apr 2016     
					
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 cunliffe
 
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							| I agree with the others.  �You haven �t got a hope in hell � is the set phrase here, if you are going to use  �hope �. However, the meaning is clear, so I wouldn �t quibble too much. |  19 Apr 2016     
					
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 englishreader
 
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							|  Just a comment on the question: Usually  �hope � is a signal word for the will future.   Therefore the question should be:   I hope I �ll be chosen for the school team.      |  19 Apr 2016     
					
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 redcamarocruiser
 
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							| I would say,  "I hope I �m chosen" or "I hope they choose me." "I hope I get it [the job, the part, the prize], etc."   The present tense is used to express the near future. http://www.englishpage.com/verbpage/simplepresent.html  |  19 Apr 2016     
					
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 yanogator
 
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							| Mary is right about the simple present for the near future. Sometimes the word "hope" needs it instead of "will".   We would say "I hope I �m home when you come to visit" rather than "I hope I �ll be home when you come to visit".   With the sentence in question, though, "I �m chosen" and "I �ll be chosen" both work.    Bruce  |  19 Apr 2016     
					
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 yanakoleva77
 
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							|  Thank you very much for the answers!  
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 leaponover
 
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							| Just to add one more idiom to the pile, in my neck of the woods we say,   You�ve got a snowball �s chance in hell.     |  19 Apr 2016     
					
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