Will be doing π Will have done
β‘οΈ #grammar #tenses #futuretense
π’ Will β be β Verbβ ing π° Future Continuous
π’ Will β have β Past Participle Verb π° Future Perfect
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β
οΈ Future continuous is used to say that an action will be in progress at a specific time in the future:
β‘οΈ In two hours she will be leaving work.
β
οΈ Future continuous is used for an action in progress in the future which is interrupted by a shorter action:
β‘οΈ I will be waiting for you when you come back.
β‘οΈ I will be sleeping by the time you reach USA
β
οΈ Future continuous is used to predict the present:
β‘οΈ He will be sleeping if you call him.
β‘οΈ The teacher will be administering the test now.
β
οΈ Future continuous is used for arrangements, often as a reminder or warning:
β‘οΈ The train will be leaving at 7AM. (So, donβt be late!)
β‘οΈ I will be attending a session at 9AM. (So, don't call me!)
β
οΈ Future continuous is used to make enquiries about someoneβs plans (without wishing to influence those plans):
β‘οΈ Will you be watching the movie with John? (You simply want to know)
β‘οΈ Will you be taking the car tomorrow? (I just want to know if the car will be free so I can take it in case you don't want to take it.)
β
οΈ We also use the future continuous to talk about complete actions (rather than ongoing actions) in the future (When we use it in this way, will be (doing) is similar to will (do) and going to (do):
β‘οΈ Later in the class, we will be talking about calculus.
β‘οΈ Shyama will not be playing in the game on Saturday.
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Will be doing π Will have done
β‘οΈ #grammar #tenses #futuretense
π’ Will β be β Verbβ ing π° Future Continuous
π’ Will β have β Past Participle Verb π° Future Perfect
2οΈβ£ π€ π€ π€ π€ π€ π€ π€ π€ π€ π€
β
οΈ When describing an action that will be completed before another action or point in the future (The action will be completed between now and some point of time in the future.):
β‘οΈ I will have eaten before the class starts.
β‘οΈ By the end of this post, you will have understood the Future Perfect Tense.
β
οΈ Future perfect says βhow longβ an action that starts before and continues up to another action or time in the future.
Usually we need βforβ to indicate time duration of that action:
β‘οΈ By next February, we will have been a couple for one year.
β‘οΈ By noon today, I will have been working for 24 hours without break.
β
οΈ We use the future perfect with a future time word, (often with 'by') to talk about an action that will finish before a certain time in the future, but we don't know exactly when:
β‘οΈ By 10 o'clock, I will have finished my homework.
β‘οΈ By the time I'm sixty, I will have retired.
β
οΈ Certainty about the Near Past (to express conviction / confidence / belief / or assumption that something happened in the near past):
β‘οΈ The train will have left by now.
β‘οΈ He will have noticed the missing money by now.
Usually we need βforβ to indicate time duration of that action:
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