Future perfect active tense
Positive form
negative form
interrogative form
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Category: englishenglish

Future perfect. Active tense

1. Future perfect active tense

FUTURE PERFECT
ACTIVE TENSE
MADE BY STUDENT OF 1002 BIOLOGY GROUP
CHUNIHINA DARYA

2.

The future perfect is a verb form or construction used to
describe an event that is expected or planned to happen
before a time of reference in the future, such as will have
finished in the English sentence "I will have finished by
tomorrow."
It is a grammatical combination of the future tense, or other
marking of future time, and the perfect, a grammatical aspect
that views an event as prior and completed.

3.

4. Positive form

POSITIVE FORM
In English, the future perfect construction consists of
the auxiliary verb will (or shall; see shall and will) to
mark the future, the auxiliary verb have to mark the
perfect, and the past participle of the main verb (the
second component of the English perfect construction).
For example:
• She will have fallen asleep by the time we get home.
• I shall have gone by then.
• Will you have finished when I get back?

5. negative form

NEGATIVE FORM
The first auxiliary may be contracted to 'll. The
negative form is made with will not or shall not; these
have their own contractions won't and shan't. Some
examples:
• I'll have made the dinner by 6.
• He won't have done (or will not have done) it by this
evening.
• Won't you have finished by Thursday? (or Will you
not have finished by Thursday?)

6. interrogative form

INTERROGATIVE FORM
In the interrogative form the first auxiliary verb is
placed before the subject. For example:
• Will he have been working?
• Will you have finished when I get back?
• Will we have made the dinner by 6?

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