Do you want to be TEFL or TESOL-certified and teach in Donghe Jiedao? Are you interested in teaching English in Shaoguan 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.
Home > Teaching in China > Teach english in Shaoguan Shi > Teach English in Donghe Jiedao - Shaoguan Shi
Teach English in Donghe Jiedao - Shaoguan Shi
There are a number of different ways of referring to the future in English. It is important to remember that we are expressing more than simply the time of the action or event. Obviously, any 'future' tense will always refer to a time 'later than now', but it may also express our attitude to the future event. Several tenses are used to express the future. The future tense section shows the form and function of each of these uses of future tenses.There are four future verb tenses in English:Simple future tense,Future continuous tense,Future perfect tense,Future perfect continuous tense. There are also several other ways to talk about the future without using a future verb tense:using the present continuous to talk about future arrangements,using the simple present to talk about scheduled events,using \"going\" to talk about the future,future obligations,the immediate future. There are several different ways in English that you can talk about the future:predictions/statements of fact,intentions,arrangements,scheduled events. The auxiliary verb ?will? is used in making predictions or simple statements of fact about the future.The auxiliary verb ?going to? is used in talking about intentions. (an intention is a plan for the future that you have already thought about.) The present continuous tense is used in talking about arrangements. (An arrangement is is a plan for the future that you have already thought about and discussed with someone else.) The present simple tense is usually used to refer to future events that are scheduled (and outside of our control).