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		Ask for help > Can you help please     
			
		 Can you help please 
		
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 Pretty3
 
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							| Can you help please 
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							| Hi,
Is this sentence correct:
If I see my friend needing help , I will help her?
Thank you |  9 Sep 2019      
					
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 cunliffe
 
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							| If I see my friend needing help, I will help her. Yes, that sentence is fine.    Just to add, it�s nothing to do with the future tense; it�s just describing a state of affairs.  |  9 Sep 2019     
					
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 douglas
 
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							|  You could also use present simple:     "If I see my friend needing help,  I help her."    In this form you are simply stating a fact, in the other form (will future/first conditional) you are looking towards the future and what will/might happen.   Cheers,  Douglas |  10 Sep 2019     
					
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 cunliffe
 
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							| Douglas is right and there are other ways of expressing this thought. Just to quibble, though, I didn�t take that particular �will� as future, I took it as �whenever my friend needs help, I help her�  or, in the way he has rephrased it. I think that both are fine and actually, mean the same thing. However, I see that it can be construed as a simple future. Another however (!), if that�s the intended meaning, it would be better to use the conditional, �if I saw my friend needing help, I would help her�. Interesting. |  10 Sep 2019     
					
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 yanogator
 
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							| Lynne and Douglas are both right, but Douglas is using the first conditional (If I see my friend needing help, I will help her", while Lynne�s is the second conditional (If I saw my friend needing help, I would help her). Lynne also gave an example of the zero conditional with "Whenever my friend needs help, I help her", using whenever in place of if.   Bruce  |  10 Sep 2019     
					
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