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This unit introduces the future tenses, the Future Simple, the Future Continuous, the Future Perfect, the Future Perfect continuous, Be going + Infinitive, the Present Simple, and the Present Continuous. The unit also introduces future tense uses for the Present Simple and Present Continuous. The Future Simple affirmative form is made as: (subject) + (will) + (base verb). Its negative: (subject) + (will) + (not) + (base verb). And its question form as: (Will) + (subject) + (base verb) + (?). The Future Simple is the first tense introduced to have a negative question form, which is forms as: (Will) + (subject) + (not) + (base verb) + (?). The tenses’ primary uses are: Facts and certainties in the future, making promises or predictions, making assumptions/speculations, making threats, and indicating sudden decisions. The Future Continuous affirmative is made as: (subject) + (will) + (be) + (verb –ing). The negative is: (subject) + (will) + (not) + (be) + (verb –ing). And the question form is: (Will) + (subject) + (be) + (verb –ing). The Future Continuous is used to: indicate that an action will be in progress at a future point in time, to speculate what might be happening at the present point in time, make polite questions about another’s intentions, and to
refer to confirmed future events. The Future Perfect affirmative word order is: (subject) + (will) + (have) + (past participle verb). Word order for the negative is: (subject) + (will) + (not) + (have) + (past part. verb). And the question word order is: (Will) + (subject) + (have) + (past part. verb) + (?). The Future Perfect is a tense with only one usage, that being, to indicate that an action will be completed by a specific time in the future. The Future Perfect Continuous affirmative is formed as: (subject) + (will) + (have) + (been) + (verb –ing). The negative as: (subject) + (will) + (not) + (have) + (been) + (verb –ing). And the question as: (Will) + (subject) + (have) + (been) + (verb –ing) + (?). Like the Future Perfect, the Future Perfect Continuous’ only usage is to indicate how long an action will have been occurring by a specific point in time. The Be Going + Infinitive tense is the last ‘new’ tense introduced in this unit and its affirmative form is: (subject) + (am) + (going) + (to) + (base verb). Its negative form is: (subject) + (am) + (not) + (going) + (to) + (base verb). And its question form is: (Are) + (subject) + (going) + (to) + (base verb) + (?). This tense’s primary uses are: to indicate intentions, to make predictions based
on present evidence, and to indicate future plans. The last two future tenses introduced are actually new uses of the Present Simple and the Present Continuous. The Present Simple can be used to: indicate a formal event will occur in the future, to describe timetables and schedules, and to describe anotherÂ’s actions in an impersonal tone. The Present Continuous can be used to: describe confirmed plans and arrangements or to indicate plans and decisions without an accompanying time frame. What I realized for this unit us that the future tenses are potentially a large source of confusion for English language students. Many of the usages in each tense can easily be confused with another from a different tense. Also, introducing new uses for the previously used present tenses could be equally as confusing. Therefore, any lesson involving future tense should be slow and broken up into manageable sections depending on the level of the learners. Teachers would be wise to check the students' understanding multiple times during the course of the lessons in order to identify and correct any errors.", In this Unit we learned about Future tense. Like Present and Paste these Future tense is composed of future simple
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