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Apply Now!Home / TEFL Certification / TESOL Izmir / TESOL Northcliffe
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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:
Seven most common future tenses are the 1) future simple, 2) future continuous, 3)future perfect, 4) future perfect continuous, 5) ‘be going’ + infinitive, 6) present simple, 7) present continuous. Out of these 7, number 5 and 7 are the most frequently used. Future simple form Affirmative: I/you/he/she/it/we/they shall/will + verb Negative: I/you/he/she/it/we/they shall/will + not etc. Question: Shall/will I? Will you? Negative Question: Will/shall I/you not? Shan’t / Won’t I? Contractions: I’ll/you’ll/shan’t/won’t etc Usages It is used for future facts and certainties, promises, predictions, assumptions or speculations, spontaneous decisions and threats. Shall is often used in making suggestions, invitations etc. In affirmative sentences its use has become more formal. Will generally expresses a stronger intentions, coercion or determination than shall. Typically students make mistakes/errors when they are confused with ‘be going to’ and the future simple. Future continuous form: subject + will + be + verb + ing (present participle) Usages It is used as follows: 1) to say something will be in progress at a particular moment in future. 2) to ‘predict the present’. To say what we think or guess might be happening now. 3) for
polite enquiries referring to other people’s plans, but not to influence the listener’s intentions. 4) to refer to future events which are fixed/decided ( without suggesting personal intentions) Typically students make errors/mistakes involving ideas that action will continue around a specific point in future. Future perfect form: will + have + past participle Usages: It is used to say that something will have done, completed or achieved by a certain time in future. Students typically make mistakes or err when they are confused with future perfect continuous and future perfect. Future perfect continuous form: will+ have + been + verb+ ing Usages: It is used to say how long something will have continued by a certain time. It often includes an adverbial expression that begins with ‘by’. ‘Be going’+ Infinitive ( ‘going to’future) form: verb ‘to be’in the present + going to + base form of verb. Usages: It is used to indicate intentions, predictions based on present evidence and plans (decisions made before speaking)", This is a unit with a lot to learn
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