The document discusses the future perfect and future progressive tenses in English. It provides examples of how to form sentences using will be + verb-ing for the future progressive and will have + past participle for the future perfect. It explains that the future progressive signifies an action that will be ongoing at a specific time in the future, while the future perfect signifies an action that will be completed by a certain time in the future.
2. Is it correct?
Day Activities
I don’t will reading Harry
Next Monday
Potter.
Will playing volleyball at
Next Wednesday
the beach at 9 a.m.?
I will watching a movie
Next Friday
Next Friday.
3. Correction
• I don’t will reading Harry Potter.
•I won’t be reading Harry Potter.
•Will playing volleyball at the beach at 9 a.m.?
•Will you be playing volleyball at the beach at
9 a.m.?
• I will watching a movie Next Friday.
•I will be watching a movie Next Friday.
4. What will you be doing
• on Valentine’s Day?
•on Chinese New Year?
•exam? the English final
after
•semester? day of the
on the last
•during summer?
6. Future Progressive
•Signifies something that will be in
progress at a particular time in the
future
• Next semester, I will be studying at
Hogwarts.
• Usually mention the future time.
•nightly news.
At 8 p.m., I will be watching the
7. Future Progressive
•
At midnight next New Year’s Eve, I will
be standing on a tower.
•
This time next week, I will be taking
the exam.
•Tonight, I will be studying in the
library.
8. Future Progressive
Will be + Ving
•
Affirmative sentence
•
I will be studying in the library at 6 p.m.
•
Interrogative sentence
•
Will Jane be studying with you?
•
Negative sentence
•
No, Jane will not be studying with me.
10. Future Perfect
•
Signifies something that will finish at a
particular time in the future
• In the next four years, I will have
graduated from Hogwarts.
•
‘BY’ is often used
•By the time you arrive, the party will
have ended.
•
*use present tense in time clause*
11. Future Perfect
•
Next Monday, I will have studied here
for a year.
•The car is running low on fuel. By the
time we reach a tollway, we will have
run out of gasoline.
•
By the end of the century, oil will have
depleted.
12. Future Perfect
Will have + past participle
•
Affirmative sentence
•
I will have done with my work by 6 p.m.
•
Interrogative sentence
•
Will Jane have done with her work too?
•
Negative sentence
•
No, Jane will not have done by 6 p.m .
13. Difference in time
•studying at Hogwarts.be
Next semester, I will
•IInwill have graduated
the next four years,
from Hogwarts.
I will be studying Next 4 years
Now
Next semester I will have graduated
14. Future Perfect VS. Simple
•
When mom gets home, I will clean the
house.
• The sentence doesn’t say when it will
be done. It merely expresses intention.
•
When mom gets home, I will have cleaned
the house.
• The house will be spotless when mom
arrives.