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The Future. [ http://www.english-online.org.uk/course.

htm ]
The use of the future in English is more complicated than in many other languages. This is
because the future in English can be described by a number of different tenses depending
on what part of the future is important to the person telling you about it. He might want to
tell you that the thing which will happen is a regular event, something that cannot be
avoided, something he has arranged, something he wants to happen, how long it will be
until something happens, and even how sure he is that it will happen.

In this section we are going to look at six ways to talk about the future, and grammatical
structures used with each.

* Using 'will' (simple future).


* The present continuous (arranged future)
* Using 'going to' (predicted future)
* The present simple (timetable future)
* Described futures (future continuous)
* The future in the past (future pefect)

Simple futures.

Simple futures futures with 'will' have a number of uses:


For example:
'I will be home at six o'clock.' (a statement about the future)
'You will not talk to me like that!' (a command)
'I will have a coffee, thank you, waiter' (describing a decision)
Simple futures use 'will' (or won't) plus the infinitive without 'to'. Statements about the future
often have a temporal indicator. (six o'clock, tomorrow, soon). An order is given as a future
tense when it has a subject. Orders without a subject (Come here! Read this.) use the
infinitive without 'will' and are used when the order has to be obeyed immediately. Orders
with 'will' have a subject and a future intention. 'Will' is stressed, and not shortened. (i.e. not
'you'll, he'll etc.')
For example:
'The tank regiment will advance and capture that hill'
'You will go to Mrs Jones tomorrow and apologise.'
The future with 'will' to express a decision is used at the moment that the decision is made,
or to show that this decision is a very firm one, and that the person who has made it can't
be persuaded to change his mind.
For example:
'My holidays? Oh, I think that this year I will go to Spain'
'I will marry Jim, and there is nothing that can stop me!'

Arranged futures.

Once a decision has been made, it becomes an Arranged future. Arranged futures are
futures where you have decided what to do, but you have not yet done it.
For example:
'I am going to Spain for my holidays. I have booked two weeks in July.'
'I'm meeting Jack for lunch next week. He called me this morning.'
'Fred is taking Mary to the cinema on Saturday. He asked her yesterday.'
We discuss arranged futures with the present continuous (the auxiliary 'to be' and the
present participle). This is because the future action started at the moment the decision
was made, and it will continue until the time that the action is finished. We often use a
temporal indicator with arranged futures to show that the future is not happening now
For example:
Mike is doing his exams (now!)
Mike is doing his exams in December. (not now)

Predicted Futures

Sometimes we can see what the future will be from the information that we have now. To
show that we are doing this we use a future with 'going to' plus infinitive.
For example:
'She's going to have a baby' (Look at her tummy - she is pregnant.)
'I'm going to be late' (It takes me 20 minutes to get there, and I have only got five minutes
left)
We can also use a predicted future to say what we want to do.
For example:
'I'm going to sleep for a while'
'I'm going to have some more tea'
This is because the information about the future which we have includes information about
what we want the future to be. It also suggests that you have thought about it before
speaking. (Remember , spontaneous decisions use 'will').
For example:
What are you going to do?
Means 'Have you thought about your plans for the future and about what will happen next?'
When we use 'going to' (intention) together with 'going to' (movement) we normally use
them as just one phrase.
For example:
'I'm going to Spain for our holiday this year'
Not: - I'm going to go to Spain for our holiday this year
We can also use 'going to' for something that we think is impossible to avoid
For example:
'We know the world is going to end one day'
And we often use it with first conditionals
For example:
If you keep eating that, you are going to be sick.

Described Futures

Described futures use the future continuous. Just as we use the present continuous to
descibe what we are doing now, we use the future continuous to describe what we will be
doing in the future.
For example:
'This time next week, I'll be lying on a beach in Tuscany'
'We'll be having a party next week, do you want to come?'
'If you need me, I'll be waiting upstairs'
Because the described future uses 'will', we know that it is about the future, so a temporal
indicator is not necessary. The tense is the future continuous, so it uses 'will be' and a
present participle.
English people sometimes use this tense to make suggestions.
For example:
'I'll be going then, shall I?'
'Shall we be getting started?'
It is also used to refuse invitations
For example:
Fred: 'Do you want to come to the cinema with me tomorrow evening, Mary?'
Mary: 'Oh, I can't. I'll be washing my hair.'

Timetable futures

Timetable futures are used to describe futures which are fixed, or for an event that
happens regularly and will do so again in the future. This event is described by an infinitive
without to, as if it was a present simple tense.
For example:
'I have my exams next week'
'Halley's comet comes again in fifty years'
'Christmas is on a Wednesday this year.'
We often use this future tense to describe what is going to happen at a certain time.
For example:
In the next act, Jack climbs the beanstalk.
Our holiday starts tomorrow.
And of course, for timetables
The bus leaves in ten minutes.
The eclipse is at 11.30 tonight

The future as the past.

This is the future with the perfect tense. When we use this future, we 'move' ourselves to a
time in the future, and look back at the 'past'. Because all perfect tenses describe the
relationship of one time with another time, we have to use a temporal indicator when using
this tense.
For example:
'This time next week, we will have lived here for ten years.'
'He will have forgotten about it by this time tomorrow.'
When you finish this, you will have read all the examples in this unit.
This tense uses 'will have' and a past participle. It usually has two parts - the time in the
future, and what will happen between that time and the time when the person is speaking.

In a few seconds you will have finished reading this description of the future tense. Next
you will do some exercises. Do you think you are going to do well? The new exercises are
coming up now. They come after you press the blue arrow. Soon you will be doing them.
Good luck!

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