If you never use complex sentences, everything you write is going to be simple and you are limiting yourself in what you can do. You would find it hard to avoid using complex sentences if you are going to write a substantial piece of work.
It is important for a speaker to use short simple sentences so that the person listening would easily understand it.
Using short, simple sentences helps ensure clear communication and comprehension for the audience. It helps avoid confusion, makes the message more impactful, and allows for easier retention of information.
The future tense of "should" is "shall." For example, "I should study" would become "I shall study."
A simple answer would be: The dog would gnaw at the fence to escape.
I have no clue what u are talking about
Simple futureWill is typically used in all persons to express simple futurity:I will grow old some day.Will they be here tomorrow?Shall can also be used for this purpose in the first person (with "I" and "we"), and this usage has been presented as compulsory by some prescriptivist grammarians of English:I shall grow old some day.We shall all grow old some day.Conditional sentencesWould and should are used in the same way as other preterite modal verbs in the apodosis clause when the conditional form is being used.Would is the most common modal verb used in this sense, as it expresses simple consequence (as opposed to the uncertainty involved withmight or could). Some speakers may additionally use should in the first person for the same purpose. Such usage is confined to those who would use shall in the first person to express simple futurity. It remains in stock phrases such as "I should think" and "I should expect".We should/he would have consented if you had asked.Should we/would he have missed you if you had been there?I should/you would like a bath.Should I/would he like it myself, himself?You should do it if we could make you. (Our conditional command.)They should have had it if they had asked. (My conditional consent.)And a sentence containing both (as requested):I shall leave and nobody will stop me.When the speaker wants to be more forceful, he/she could use shall/will the other way round:I will leave and nobody shallstop me!Shall for I and We; will for he/she/it/they is the suggested way, but in everyday speech nowadays they appear to be interchangeable, and shall is used less and less frequently. We shall see how long it will continue in use.A quick way to see the difference is:Will generally implies that what follows is something that the subject (actor) literally "wills," where as shall does not imply such rather it merely becomes a grammatical device linking the subject to the main verb.+++Whilst "Shall" is becoming somewhat rarer in everyday speech, it is used to indicate compulsion rather than recommendation ("should") in legal or regulatory prose including for example company policies: "Appropriate PPE shall be worn in the workshop"; "All portable mains-powered electrical equipment shall be tested annually."
Can - Could May - Might Will - Would Shall - Should
You can combine two sentences in an 'if' condition with 'should' by using the word 'should' only once. For example, "If you should need help or have any questions, please don't hesitate to contact us."
Try "The witness would not give a simple answer and was clearly being evasive".
Helping verbs are: have has had do does did will should shall would may might must can could
The language of the passage is formal and descriptive, utilizing complex sentences with specific vocabulary and imagery to convey detailed information or evoke particular emotions or moods.