The use of future in English

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The use of future in English

Unread postby karen » Fri Apr 15, 2005 10:39 pm

Can anybody help me with the following: how do I explain the tenses future perfect and future continuous?

thanks fa lot

Karen
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Unread postby danobodhisattvah » Wed Aug 31, 2005 7:08 am

I believe future perfect is:

"Tonight we will have dined on turkey."

Future continuous is:

"The earth will be rotating ad infinitum.

Future perfect is a completed action, future continuous is a continuous action that can be interrupted, such as, "I will be waiting for you."

HTH :mrgreen:
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Unread postby schetin » Wed Sep 14, 2005 12:24 pm

Hi Karen,

But for what has already been said, both Continuous and Perfect used after "will" can render a certain degree of certainty. Say, "You will have done your homework" could mean "I can't believe you have."
It can also mean an expected result, say: "You will all have seen from the handouts which you have in front of you..." meaning "I think you have seen...", or an expected action going on now: "He'll be driving home now."


Regards,

Slava
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