Do you want to be TEFL or TESOL-certified and teach in Xingping Zhen? Are you interested in teaching English in Guilin Shi? Check out ITTT’s online and in-class courses, Become certified to Teach English as a Foreign Language and start teaching English ONLINE or abroad! ITTT offers a wide variety of Online TEFL Courses and a great number of opportunities for English Teachers and for Teachers of English as a Second Language.
Unit 8 explains how future tenses are formed, their usages and the differences between them. Examples are given of common mistakes that foreign speakers make. There are seven future tenses in English language: - The future simple tense is used to express future facts and certainties, promises, predictions based on present evidence, assumptions, spontaneous decisions, and threats. - The future continuous tense is applied to say that something will be in progress at a specific time in the future, to guess what we think might be happening now, for polite enquiries without influencing listeners? intentions, and to refer to fixed or decided future events. - The future perfect tense is used to say that something will have been completed by a certain time in the future. - The future perfect continuous tense expresses how long something will have continued by a certain time in the future. - \"Going to\" future is used for intentions, predictions based on present evidence, and plans made before the time of speaking. - The present simple tense addresses a more formal situation, to suggest a more impersonal tone, and is used in time tables. - The present continuous tense is used for definite agreements, decisions, and plans without a time frame.