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Apply Now!Home / TEFL Certification / TEFL Taizhou / Teach English L'Ancienne-Lorette Canada
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This is how our TEFL graduates feel they have gained from their course, and how they plan to put into action what they learned:
The future tense is one of the most challenging areas of study in the English language. So many different tenses and ideas can be used with future meanings. The future simple tense (subject+shall/will+verb) is used for future facts and certainties, promises, predictions, assumptions/speculations, spontaneous decisions and threats. An example of this tense is I'll see you later. The future continuous tense (subject+will+be+verb+ing[present participle]) is used to say that something will be in progress at a particular moment in the future, to say what we think or guess might be happening now, for polite inquiries referring to other people's plans, and to refer to future events which are fixed or decided without suggesting personal intention. An example of this tense is I'll be getting on the bus at seven a.m. for school. The future perfect tense (will+have+past participle) is used to say that something will have been done, completed or achieved by a certain time in the future. An example of this tense is I'll have finished my project by Thursday. The future perfect continuous (will+have+been+verb+ing) is used to say how long something will have continued by a certain time. Be going + infinitive ('going to' future) is constructed in the form verb 'to be' in the present+going to+base
form of verb. An example of this tense is He'll have been driving for two hours before he reaches Los Angeles. Be going + infinitive is used for intentions, predictions based on present evidence as well as plans/decisions made before speaking. An example of this tense is It's going to rain later. The present simple tense is used to suggest a more formal situation, for timetables and schedules, and to suggest a more impersonal tone. An example of this tense is The trolley leaves the station in five minutes. The present continuous tense is used for definite arrangements and for decisions and plans without a time frame. An example of this tense is I'm meeting him for lunch tomorrow.
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