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Apply Now!Home / TEFL Certification / TEFL Course Costa Rica / TESOL Grand Bank Canada / TESOL Learmonth - Victoria / Degree Required To Teach English Abroad
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Future tenses are complicated and nuanced in English, with seven forms making comprehension confusing for students. As always, each tense takes both a simple and continuous form. In addition to five actual future tenses, the present simple and present continuous are used for the future. Shall is used in more formal occasions with suggestions and invitations. Future Simple is used for facts, promises, predictions (weather), assumptions, spontaneous decisions, and even threats (If you don't x, I will y). Students mistake adding an infinitive after 'will', forget the base form 'be', and typically confuse 'will' with 'going to'. Future Continuous denotes that something will be in progress at a particular future time; it is used to 'predict the present' (his plane will be leaving now), polite enquiries that don't encourage intent (will you be joining us?), or fixed future events (he'll be returning on Friday). Again, mistakes are caused from missing part of a structure (we will be wait for you). Future Perfect expresses events that are known to be realised at a point in the future and is usually accompanied by 'by' (by this time tomorrow, I will have finished this unit). It is often confused with the continuous form of the tense in terms of stipulating that x will have happened by
a certain time within a stretch of time. Future Perfect Continuous refers to how long something will have continued up to a future point (by Friday, I will have been working on this unit for a week). Going to + infinitive is used for obvious predictions (it's going to rain) and decided-upon plans (I'm going to buy a new car). Present Simple is frequently used for schedules and timetables (the AC flight leaves at 14:00 every day). Present Continuous is also used to denote pre-made arrangements (I'm flying out on AC39) or decisions without specific time frame (I'm buying a new car).
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