English, asked by charusahagal0786, 4 days ago

the Boy(play) tennis since morning? future perfect continuous tense.​

Answers

Answered by priyakumarit10
0

Answer:

The future perfect continuous tense of The Boy (play) tennis since morning is The boy is playing tennis since morning.

Explanation:

The Future Perfect Continuous Tense is used to describe activities or circumstances that will persist up until a specific point in the future. In other words, acts that started in the past and will go on until a specific point in the future are described or indicated using the Future Perfect Continuous Tense. The future perfect progressive tense is another name for it. Whenever we use the Future Perfect Continuous Tense, we look backwards at the duration of an action, activity, or occurrence that started in the past or the present but will go on into the future.

Will have been + present participle is how this tense is used. Whether the subject is singular or plural, we use "will have been" when creating the Future Perfect Continuous Tense. The second element, the present participle, is created by ending the verb's root in -ing.

For instance, studying, learning, blending, laughing, etc. We indicate the inquiries by reversing the subject and will while phrasing them in the Future Perfect Continuous Tense. Not is inserted between will and have to create negative statements.

It makes use of the auxiliary verb will have been plus present tense. In December, I will have lived in New York for two years, and when I turn 38, I will have been singing for twenty-five years, to name a few examples of the Future Perfect Continuous Tense.

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Answered by Pratham2508
0

Answer:

The boy has been playing tennis since morning.

Explanation:

We are required to convert the statement 'the Boy(play) tennis since morning' into future perfect continuous tense which is 'The boy has been playing tennis since morning.'

Future perfect continuous tense:

  • The future perfect continuous, also known as the future perfect progressive, is a verb tense used to talk about acts that will go on until a certain future point.
  • The verb's present participle (verb root + -ing) and will + have + been combined to form the future perfect continuous.
  • When we describe an action in the future in perfect continuous tense, we are reflecting back on the period of that activity while projecting ourselves forward in time.
  • The action will have started at some point in the past, present, or future, and it is anticipated that it will go on forever.

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