Is this grammatically correct? What does it mean and can it be rephrased? “If you had watched till the end, you’d would’ve seen that the benefactor has gotten all of it already”
The sentence "If you had watched till the end, you’d would’ve seen that the benefactor has gotten all of it already" contains a small grammatical error: "you’d would’ve" is incorrect because "you'd" (you would) and "would've" (would have) shouldn’t be used together in that way.
A corrected version could be: "If you had watched till the end, you would have seen that the benefactor has gotten all of it already."
This sentence means that if the listener had watched the entire content, they would have realized that the benefactor had already received everything mentioned.
Here are a couple of rephrased versions:
- "If you had watched all the way to the end, you would have noticed that the benefactor has already received everything."
- "Had you watched until the conclusion, you would have seen that the benefactor already obtained all of it."