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Teach English in Fengxin Jiedao - Chaozhou Shi

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The future is one of the most complex areas of the English language. There are four main future tenses in English (the future simple, the future continuous, the future perfect, the future perfect continuous) and several other ways to talk about the future without using a future verb tense (going to future, the present simple, the present continuous). The simple future refers to a time later than now, and expresses facts, promises, predictions, speculations, spontaneous decisions and threats. This tense is composed of subject + will/shall + the infinitive without \"to\". For example, It will rain tomorrow; I'll pay for the bill by cash; Will you marry me?; Tom will not drink his tea. In modern English \"will\" is preferred to \"shall\". \"Shall\" is mainly used with \"I\" and \"we\" to make an invitation, suggestion, etc. (Shall we go to the cinema tonight?). With the other persons (you, he, she, they) \"shall\" is only used in literary or poetic situations. The future continuous tense refers to an unfinished action or event that will be in progress at a time later than now. This tense is used for quite a few different purposes: to \"predict the present\" to say what we think or guess might be happining now; to say that something will be in progress at a particular moment in the future; for polite requiries referring to other people's plans, but not to influence the listener's intentions; to refer to future events which one fixed or decided. The future continuous is made up of subject + will + be + verb + the present participle (-ing). For example, This time tomorrow I will be sun-bathing in Thailand; Will he be coming to the meeting? Jack will not be having breakfast now. The future perfect tense refers to a completed action in the future. This tense is used to say that something will have been done, completed or achieved by a certain time in the future. The future perfect is composed of will + have + the past participle of the main verb. For example, By the end of the year she will have finished all her exams; Will you have eaten when I pick you up?; We won't have arrived by 5:00 p.m. The future perfect continuous tense is used to say how long something will have continued by a certain time. This tense is composed of will + have + been + verb + ing. For example, Next New Year I'll have been learning English for five years; They will not have been waiting here for two hours by seven o'clock; When I come at 6:00 a.m., will you have been practicing long? Going to future is used to describe intentions, predictions based on present evidence, and plans. This is made up of verb \"to be\" in the present + going to + base form of verb. For example, I'm going to buy groceries; He is not going to visit his family on Christmas; Are you going to play tennis next month? The present simple tense is used for timetables and schedules, also to suggest a more formal situation and impersonal tone. For example, The train arrives at 3.00 p.m. tomorrow; I don't have a yoga class tomorrow morning. The present continuous tense is used for definite arrangements, decisions and plans without a time frame. For example, She's going for a drink later. I'm leaving you.
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