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The seven most common future tenses are: The future simple, the future continuous, the future perfect, the future perfect continuous, be going plus infinitive, the present simple and the present continuous with future results. The future simple is formed by combining 'will' plus the verb. E.g I will pick up my car later. This tense's usages are: Future facts and certainties. Promises. Predictions (based on no present evidence). Assumptions and speculations. Spontaneous decisions and threats. Students often get confused between 'be going to' and the future simple and so teachers must make clear the differences in usage and meaning between these two. The future continuous is formed by adding 'will' and 'be' and 'the verb' and 'ing' (present participle). E.g She'll be dreaming of you. It's usages include: To say that something will be in progress at a particular moment in the future. To 'predict the present' to say what we think or guess might be happening now. For polite inquiries referring to other people's plans, but not to influence the listener's intentions. To refer to future events which are fixed or decided. Students often leave out part of the structure or get confused by the tense's function: that the action will continue around a specific point in the future. The
future perfect is formed as follows: will plus have plus past participle. E.g I will have turned 25 then. This tense is used: To say that something will have been done, completed or achieved by a certain time in the future. This tense is often confused with the future perfect continuous. The future perfect continuous is formed by combining will plus have plus been plus the verb plus -ing. E.g I will have been dancing for 2 hours by the time you arrive at the party. This tense is used to: Say how long something will have continued by a certain time. A general rule that can help students distinguish between the future perfect continuous (FPC) and the future perfect is that the FPC often includes an adverbial expression that begins with 'by'. The 'be going to' future's form is as follows: verb 'to be' in the present plus going to plus base form of verb. E.g I'm going to travel to the U.S next month. It is used for: Intentions. Predictions based on present evidence. Plans (decisions made before speaking). The present simple, when used in the future context, takes the subject and the base form of the verb and combines them in a sentence with a time in the future. E.g The bus leaves at 9.30 a.m.. The present continuous tense is made with the present simple tense of the auxiliary verb
and the present participle (verb plus -ing) of the main verb. E.g He's running in the marathon tomorrow. It's used for: Definite arrangements and decisions. Plans without a time frame that indicate future achievement. The present simple is used to suggest a more formal situation; for timetables and schedules, and to suggest a more impersonal tone.
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