S.F.T. HE SHELL hold the book . F.S.T. HE SHELL be holding the book. F.P.T. HE has held the book F.P.C.T.H. HE SHELL has been holding the book.
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Answer:
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Answer:
Future perfect continuous (I will have been working here ten years)
Grammar > Verbs > Tenses and time > Future > Future perfect continuous (I will have been working here ten years)
from English Grammar Today
Future perfect continuous: form
We use will/shall + have + been + the -ing form of the verb.
We use shall only for future time reference with I and we. Shall is more format
Future perfect continuous: use
Emphasising the length of an event at a time in the future
We use the future perfect continuous form when we are looking back to the past from a point in the future and we want to emphasise the length or duration of an activity or event:
In September the head teacher will have been teaching at the school for 20 years.
In September, she will have been living in France for a year.
I will have been studying English for three years by the end of this course.
We’re late. I think they’ll have been waiting for us. We’d better go.