These examples are sourced from soon will be update on Ludwig.guru.
"The Biopharmaceutical Classification System (BCS) and other related guidances are in the process of being (or soon will be) updated; therefore, guidelines to request biowaivers may change accordingly in the future." — ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
"Right now, the catalog has yearly updates, but soon it will be updated more frequently, with new entries flagged." — ScienceMag.org
"The story will be updated soon." — The Guardian
"The Android version will be updated soon." — TechCrunch
"As soon as it is, this post will be updated." — TechCrunch
Examples sourced from https://ludwig.guru/s/soon+will+be+update
| Phrase | Context |
|---|---|
| will be updated soon | Grammatically correct and most direct replacement. |
| will be revised shortly | More formal, using "revised" instead of "updated." |
| will be modified soon | Similar to "revised," but emphasizes a change in form or content. |
| is scheduled to be updated | Implies a planned or timetabled update. |
| will receive an update soon | Focuses on the recipient of the update rather than the object being updated. |
| to be updated in the near future | More formal and emphasizes the timeframe. |
| Expression | Meaning | Grammatical Pattern | Register |
|---|---|---|---|
| soon will be updated | Something will be revised or made current in the near future. | adverb + auxiliary verb + auxiliary verb + past participle | Neutral |
No, the core phrase "will be updated" should not be separated. While the adverb "soon" can sometimes be moved for emphasis (e.g., "It will soon be updated"), separating "will be" from "updated" introduces a grammatical error. The phrase "will be updated" forms the future passive voice and must remain intact.
"Will be updated soon" indicates that something will receive an update, implying an external action being performed on it. "Will update soon," on the other hand, means that something will perform the update itself. The first uses the passive voice, the second the active.
The most common mistake is using the base form of the verb instead of the past participle, resulting in the incorrect phrase "soon will be update". To avoid this, always remember to use the past participle after "will be" to form the future passive voice. The correct phrase is "soon will be updated."
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