Monday, March 16, 2020
Grammar Tips Using the Future Tense - Get Proofed!
Grammar Tips Using the Future Tense - Get Proofed! Using the Future Tense We use the future tense for things ranging from stating vague ambitions (e.g., ââ¬Å"I will go to Hawaii one dayâ⬠) to making concrete plans (e.g., ââ¬Å"I will book tickets this eveningâ⬠). Mastering this tense is therefore essential for expressing yourself clearly. But how does this work? In English, we usually form the future tenses using the words ââ¬Å"willâ⬠and ââ¬Å"shall.â⬠Read on for some grammatical tips. And once were done with the grammar, well go back to dreaming about Hawaii. Simple Future Tense The simple future tense combines ââ¬Å"willâ⬠or ââ¬Å"shallâ⬠with the base form of a verb (i.e., the verb form used in the simple present tense). For example, we could say: Hawaii will welcome us with open arms! Here, ââ¬Å"willâ⬠is combined with ââ¬Å"welcomeâ⬠to make a prediction. Future Continuous Tense If you want to discuss an ongoing action in the future, you need the future continuous tense: I will be lying in the sun this time next week! As shown, the future continuous combines ââ¬Å"will/shall beâ⬠and a present participle (i.e., an ââ¬Å"-ingâ⬠verb). Future Perfect Tense The future perfect tense lets us project ourselves forward and reflect on something that hasnââ¬â¢t yet happened. Specifically, the future perfect covers actions that will have been completed in the future: Once Iââ¬â¢ve been to Hawaii, I will have visited every US state. This tense is formed by combining ââ¬Å"will/shall haveâ⬠with a past participle. Future Continuous Perfect The difference between the future perfect and future perfect continuous tenses is that the future perfect continuous is used for ongoing actions that will have finished by a certain time: By the end of this journey, we will have been traveling for a month. As above, this tense usually describes an action that has already begun and specifies a time by which it will have ended. It is formed by combining ââ¬Å"will/shall have beenâ⬠with a present participle. Will or Shall? We said at the beginning of this post that ââ¬Å"willâ⬠and ââ¬Å"shallâ⬠are both used to express the future tense, but you may have noticed that we use ââ¬Å"willâ⬠in all of the examples above. In the old days, ââ¬Å"shallâ⬠was used with first-person pronouns (e.g. ââ¬Å"I shallâ⬠) and ââ¬Å"willâ⬠with second and third-person pronouns (e.g., ââ¬Å"you willâ⬠or ââ¬Å"it willâ⬠). Confusingly, these were then reversed to make an emphatic point, which is why the Fairy Godmother in Cinderella says, ââ¬Å"You shall go to the ball!â⬠But in modern American English, there are only two reasons to use ââ¬Å"shallâ⬠: To sound formal (e.g., a contract) or old-fashioned (e.g., a historical novel) To ask a question in the first person (e.g., Shall I book the tickets tonight?) In all other cases, ââ¬Å"willâ⬠is now standard with all pronoun types. Other Ways of Discussing the Future As well as using ââ¬Å"willâ⬠or ââ¬Å"shall,â⬠English offers a couple of other ways to discuss the future: Use ââ¬Å"going toâ⬠with an infinitive verb (e.g., The volcano is going to explode) Combine the present tense with a future time (e.g., It is happening tomorrow) You can use these as alternatives to the future tense forms set out above.
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