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"Soon, you will have forgotten him" and "You will soon have forgotten him" are both grammatically correct; however, while the first sounds better, neither sounds very natural. A better phrasing, if it fits the context, would be "You will soon forget him." Alternatively, you could keep the motherly tone by saying "Soon enough, you will have forgotten (all) about him," or a variation of the like.
Soon Forgotten was created in 1996.
Yes. What is not correct is your putting the article "a" before grammar.
No, "too" should be used instead of "to" in this sentence. "All too soon" is the correct phrase, meaning that something happened sooner or more quickly than expected.
No, the correct phrase is "You will go soon." This places the adverb "soon" after the verb "go" and maintains correct word order in the sentence.
We'll soon know if your prophecy is correct.
i almost forgotten my homework
That is the correct spelling of the word "forgotten" (unrecalled, unremembered).
"Could have forgotten" is the complete verb phrase in the sentence, "Could you have forgotten your sunglasses in the car."
The bitterness of poor quality remains long after the sweetness of low price is forgotten.
Sorry, no. How about: I'm hoping it rains soon.
Is 'going to' or 'will' correct in the following sentence: 'As soon as I arrive home, I am going to switch on my computer' ? Thank you