Youll find that. . . - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Thats an interesting question If you were to say "You will find the crisps in the cupboard" you would be stating a fact, or saying if you were to look you would find something to be true I would assume then that saying "You'll find that " would be a shorter way of saying, if you were to check this fact you would find it to be true
You will have to Vs Have to - English Language Usage Stack Exchange You will have to do that This is the future tense You will need to If you want to lose weight, you will have to eat less or exercise more You have to do that This is the present tense You need to you must To lose weight, you have to eat less or exercise more
Youll have had your tea - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Your question is about the meaning of the idiom, so I'll make this a comment rather than an answer, but to explain the odd verb tense: that construction means something like, "I assume that I ask you if you've had your tea, it will turn out that you have " The future-ness comes from that implied finding out So that verb tense is itself a bit of an idiom, turning the statement into an
word usage - English Language Usage Stack Exchange What does it mean when someone says "Would you please indulge me for a couple of minutes?"? The context in which I heard it makes it seem self-evident, but I may be wrong Somebody was talking to
single word requests - Is there a term for the character trait of . . . Bear in mind judgemental always implies prone to making [hasty] negative assessments The nearest equivalent I can think of for being prone to making any judgement [too] quickly (positive or negative) is impressionable Are you specifically and only asking about the "negative" tendency"?