Where do we use future perfect tense?

Where do we use future perfect tense?

The future perfect is a verb tense used for actions that will be completed before some other point in the future. The parade will have ended by the time Chester gets out of bed. At eight o’clock I will have left.

How do you use future perfect in a sentence?

The Future Perfect Tense

  1. I will have finished this book.
  2. You will have studied the English tenses.
  3. She will have cooked dinner.
  4. He will have arrived.
  5. We will have met Julie.
  6. It will have stopped raining.
  7. They will have left Japan.

What is the example of future perfect?

For example, “You will have worked ten hours by Saturday.” In other words, the ten hours of working will occur between now (the present) and Saturday (the future). In another article, we discuss verbs in the future perfect progressive tense.

Can you or could you which is correct?

Both are correct. The first is more direct, and the second is more polite. Could you please . . . gives slightly more room for refusal than Can you please . . .

Is could a past tense of can?

Could has no tenses, no participles, and no infinitive form. Could is used as the past tense of can when it means that someone had the ability to do something, or that something was possible: The Roman army could march 30 miles in a day.

Could is present or past?

Could is used for past and future instances, or sometimes in the present tense (although in the present tense it is normally describing a possibility or is part of a question). For example, She spoke so fast that I could not hear her, or, he could do it if he chooses to. In the present, we use can.

Can in the future?

“Can” in the future” In the future therefore we use the conjugated “to be able to” structure. Examples: He will be able to do the shopping for you when he comes home. As we also mentioned previously, the modal verb “can” or in future “to be able to” can also be used to express ability as well as possibility.

Can past sentences?

Could is used as the past tense of “can”. I could help you learn English. We could come over next week. My friends could fix your car.

Can’t in the past?

The past tense of can’t is can’ted. The third-person singular simple present indicative form of can’t is can’ts. The present participle of can’t is can’ting.

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