Future Perfect

FORM

Positive and Negative

I will have done
I won’t have done

You will have done
You won’t have done

He/She/It will have done
He/She/It won’t have done

We/They will have done
We/They won’t have done

Questions

Will I have done?
Won’t I have done?

Will you have done?
Won’t you have done?

Will he/she/it have done?
Won’t he/she/it have done?

Will we/they have done?
Won’t we/they have done?

USE      

  • Future perfect is used when talking about an action that will that will be completed between now and a specified point in the future.

This time next week, she will have graduated from the university.

Common phrases used together with Future Perfect:

By April, she will have been 18.
This time next week, she will have left the country.
In two years’ time, they will have been together for 15 years.
When she leaves, he’ll have cleaned the house.
By the time Ronald get to school, his classmates will probably have waited a long time.

  • Future Perfect is also used to predict about events in the future that will be complete before a specified time in the future.

Do they think he will have stolen all her money?
No, they won’t have broken that!

 

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