Future Perfect | English Grammar Explained
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- Опубліковано 13 чер 2024
- Unlock the secrets of the Future Perfect tense in English grammar with our comprehensive guide! Learn how to express completed actions or events that will occur before a specified point in the future. Master the nuances and enhance your language skills with practical examples and insights. Watch now and take your English proficiency to new heights!
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English learners at all levels
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0:00 Intro
0:46 Structure of the Future Perfect
2:35 Negative Structure of the Future Perfect
3:11 Question Structure of the Future Perfect
4:02 Future Perfect Usage
7:40 Future Perfect Key time words
11:04 Future Perfect Common Mistakes
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#LearnEnglish #LanguageLearning #FuturePerfect #Tenses
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Very clear explanation
It’s so nice of you to let us know, thank you very much! Have a wonderful day! 😊 🧲
Good lesson.
Glad you liked it! Thank you!
@@TheEnglishMagnet I gave english tuition at home in Malaysia.English isn't my mother tongue, so Your english lessons are helpful to me.
@@TheEnglishMagnet A question here, I feel that we should write: I am sitting in a chair and not I am sitting on a chair. Comments please sir.
We’re happy to help you out 😊 Thanks for watching! 🧲
Good news! Both are correct: usually ‘sit on a chair’ is for flat chairs like a seat or a dining chair while ‘sit in a chair’ is usually for chairs with armrests like an office chair or an armchair. However, in all honesty, many native speakers will use ‘in’ or ‘on’ without really following the rule. Hopefully, this helps 😀
Shall we use may or might have + v3 in stead of will have v3
Let me share some examples
Hi! Great question! You can use both ‘may/might + have + v3’, however it won’t be the future perfect. But you can use ‘may/might + have + v3’ to express a possibility or speculation about a past event. ‘He may/might have driven to Austin, Texas.’ Maybe the driving happened, we’re not sure but if it did, it happened in the past. Thank you! Hoping this is useful! 🧲
For example i will have got home by tomorrow. If I have a doubt, i will get home, then shall I say, i might have got home by tomorrow. Is it correct!
Unfortunately, ‘might + have + v3’ is limited to past speculation, so it doesn’t work as a future perfect. If you really wish to use ‘might’ to express a possible future action, you could go with ‘I might get home by tomorrow’ or ‘I might be getting home by tomorrow’. The former focuses on the statement of a possible completed action while the latter emphasizes the process. Hope this answers your question, keep up the great work! 👍😃