1. FUTURE CONTINUOUS I will be playing tennis at 10am tomorrow. (+) They won't be watching TV at 9pm tonight.( - ) What will you be doing at 10pm tonight? ( ? ) What will you be doing when I arrive? ( ? ) She will not be sleeping when you telephone her. ( - ) We 'll be having dinner when the film starts. (+) Take your umbrella. It will be raining when you return.(+)
2.
3. Future Continuous "will be doing FORM Future Continuous with "Will" [will be + present participle] Examples: You will be waiting for her when her plane arrives tonight. Will you be waiting for her when her plane arrives tonight? You will not be waiting for her when her plane arrives tonight.
4. USE 1 Interrupted Action in the Future Use the Future Continuous to indicate that a longer action in the future will be interrupted by a shorter action in the future. Remember this can be a real interruption or just an interruption in time. Examples: I will be watching TV when she arrives tonight. I will be waiting for you when your bus arrives. Tonight, they will be eating dinner, discussing their plans, and having a good time.
5. Complete List of Future Perfect Forms USE 1 - Completed Action Before Something in the Future The Future Perfect expresses the idea that something will occur before another action in the future. It can also show that something will happen before a specific time in the future. Examples: By next November, I will have received my promotion. (+) By next week, I will not have finished this book. (-)
6. Will she have learned enough Chinese to communicate before she moves to Beijing? By the time I finish this course, I will have taken ten tests. ACTIVE / PASSIVE Examples: They will have completed the project before the deadline. Active The project will have been completedbefore the deadline. Passive
7. The Future Perfect Tense The future perfect tense is only used in a few situations, but it's still good to know it. Here's how to make it. The future perfect is made with the future simple of 'have' (will have) and the past participle. For regular past participles add 'ed' to the verb ('play' becomes 'played'). Here's the positive: By six pm tonight, I will have finished this book. youwill have studied the English tenses. she will have cooked dinner he will have arrived. we will have met Julie. it will have stopped raining they will have left İstanbul. For the short form, we change will to 'll.
8. By three o’clock this afternoon, ..........................you will not have studied the English tenses.(-) ..........................she will not have cooked dinner. (-) ..............................he will not have arrived. (-) ...........................we will not have met Julie. (-) ...................it will not have stopped raining. (-) ....................they will not have left Istanbul. (-)