English, asked by mk5269371, 9 months ago

examples of future imperfect​

Answers

Answered by sid9839
1

Answer:

The future perfect is made with the future simple of 'have' (will have) and the past participle.

...

By six pm tonight:

I will have finished this book.

You will 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 Japan.

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Answered by gauravgupta2530
0

Answer:

The imperfect tense is one of the verb tenses used to talk about the past, especially in descriptions, and to say what was happening or used to happen, for example, It was sunny at the weekend; We were living in Spain at the time; I used to walk to school.

Explanation:

Future Imperfect Continuous Tense. FUNCTION: It is used to express the 'idea' that an action/event is predicted, planned, promised, expected or obliged to have been being continued at some certain time in the future or while another action/event happens later in the future.

FORMULA AND EXAMPLES:

Positive:

(I) Subject + [shall/will] + have been + verb_ing + {adverbs}

(A) Subject + [shall/will] + have been + verb_ing + {objects/adverbs}

(P) Subject + [shall/will] + have been + being + verb-pp + {by objects/adverbs}

(I) I shall have been working in a good company before next-month. (Obligation)

(I) I will have been sleeping for 8 hours when you wake me up tomorrow morning. (Plan)

(A) We shall have been collecting the data before next Monday. (Obligation)

(A) She will have been studying English for two years in January 2010. (Prediction)

(P) The ordered items shall have been being delivered before tomorrow afternoon. (Obligation)

(P) The dinner will have been being cooked before we come home this evening. (Plan)

(I) Subject + [am/is/are] + going to + have been + verb_ing + {adverbs}

(A) Subject + [am/is/are] + going to + have been + verb_ing + {objects/adverbs}

(P) Subject + [am/is/are] + going to + have been + being + verb-pp + {by objects/adverbs}

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