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Future Perfect Tense

Future Perfect Tense Examples – All Four Forms

13th June 2020 By Edify English Leave a Comment

Learning tenses makes a world of difference to your English language prowess and helps you to master English grammar and the subject in totality. The following article describes the various forms of future perfect tense examples and explains how the tense is used in everyday communication. Let us first look at the structure and rules of the tense.

Future Perfect Tense Examples

Future Perfect Tense

The future perfect tense is used in sentences that denote the actions that will be completed by a certain time in the future.

Structure: Subject + will + have + Verb 3 (V3) + Object

Examples: 

  • We will have seen that film by tomorrow night.
  • Sasha will have gone to London by June next year.
  • I will have got a job by the end of the year.
  • She will have reached there by midnight.

Future Perfect tense Examples – All forms

Like every tense, the future perfect tense too can be expressed in the following forms

Positive: Subject + will have +verb 3 + Object

Positive Interrogative: Will + subject + have + V3 + Object?

Negative: Subject + will not have + V3 + Object.

Negative Interrogative: Will + subject + not have + V3 + Object?

Let us take an example and write all the four forms.

  • Positive: I will have submitted my report by next week.
  • Positive Interrogative: Will I have submitted my report by next week?
  • Negative: I will not have submitted my report by next week.
  • Negative Interrogative: Will I not have submitted my report by next week?

Exercise: Let us take some more future perfect tense examples and write the above four forms of those sentences.

  1. I will have become a doctorate by this time next year.
  2. Will I have received my cheque by tomorrow?
  3. Sam will not have eaten his lunch by now.
  4. My son will have left for London by tomorrow morning.
  5. Will the professor have announced the marks by the weekend?
  6. The kid will have reached the school before the bell rings.

For remaining tenses, Click here

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Future Tense- Kinds, Structure, Example Sentences

6th January 2020 By Edify English 2 Comments

We can describe future tense for the sentences whose action will happen/ hasn’t happened yet. The four types of future tense are discussed below.

Future-Tense-Kinds-Structure-Example-Sentences

Simple Future Tense

This is used in the sentences where the action will take place at some time in the future.

Structure: Subject + Will/ Shall + Verb 1 (V1) + Object
  • I shall meet you tomorrow.
  • He will play Cricket in the evening.
  • Martin will complete his studies in 2020.
  • They will go on a world tour next month.
  • We shall be late to the show.

Tips:  Sentences that contain the words tomorrow, next week, soon, later, after, etc. can use Future tense.

When are will and shall used?

Traditionally, Shall is used with the first person pronouns (I and We) and Will is used with the second and third-person pronouns (he, she, It and they). However, when expressing something certain, will can be used with the first person pronouns and shall can be used with the second and third-person pronouns.

–          We will not tolerate such behavior.

–          They shall go to the Museum.


Future Continuous Tense

Structure: Subject + Will/ shall + be + verb 1 + ing + Object

This is expressed in sentences that show an action that will be going on at some time in the future.

  • I will be playing a game at 8 PM tonight.
  • Tom will be visiting India in January next year.
  • I shall be writing an essay for an examination at this time tomorrow.

Future Perfect Tense

Structure: Subject + will/shall + have + Verb 3 (V3) + Object

Sentences that denote the actions that will be completed by a certain time in the future use the future perfect tense.

  • We will have seen that film by tomorrow night.
  • Sasha will have gone to London by June next year.
  • I will have got a job by the end of the year.
  • She will have reached there by midnight.
  • I will have finished the work by this time tomorrow.

Future Perfect Continuous Tense

Structure: Subject + will/ shall + have been + Verb 1 + ing + object

If an action is projected to be in progress over a period of time, we can use this perfect continuous tense in that sentence.

  • I will have been working in this organization for two years by the end of June this year.
  • Monika will have been pursuing her research for one year by December 2019.

To learn about past tense, click here

To learn about present tense, click here.

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Filed Under: Grammar, Tenses Tagged With: Future Continuous Tense, future indefinite tense, Future Perfect Continuous Tense, Future perfect continuous tense examples, Future Perfect Tense, Future Tense, Simple Future Tense

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