Traditionally,shall is used for the future tense with the first-person pronouns I and We. but presently in American English Shall is almost absolute no-one is using shall these days however In grammer when you are very deterministic about any task then you should use will . i.e. " I will do that Job asap " , it shows your determination for that particular task .
Use "shall" for expressing a future action or intention, "should" for indicating a recommendation or expected outcome, and "must" for conveying a requirement or obligation. "Shall" is typically used in formal documents or legal contexts, while "should" and "must" are used in everyday language to express differing levels of necessity or urgency.
"Shall" is used with "I" or "we" to tell about the future. Similarly, "will" is used with "you","he","she","it" or "they" for the prediction.whereas "shall" is used with "you","he","she","it" or "they" for threatening or forcefully saying something. "will" is used with "I" or "we" for the similar purpose.For example - "it will break" indicates the prediction while "it shall break" indicates the threat or guarantee of the action.
I shall tell you and you shall have the answer.
Either.
I believe the mission statement of zong is... "We must not lose our zong, because then we shall not use of our bong."
The modal verbs do not have past participles: * can * may * must * shall * will
You shall have no other Gods but me.You shall not make for yourself any idol, nor bow down to it or worship it.You shall not misuse the name of the Lord your God.You shall remember and keep the Sabbath day holy.Respect your father and mother.You must not kill.You must not commit adultery.You must not steal.You must not give false evidence against your neighbour.You must not be envious of your neighbour's goods. You shall not be envious of his house nor his wife, nor anything that belongs to your neighbour.
No. "Should" means one ought to do something. The meaning of "shall" depends upon the subject: if the subject is "I" or "we", "shall" means "I or we intend to" do something; if the subject is "you" or "he, she, it or they", shall means the person or persons "must" do something. "I shall go to the store" means that I intend to go to the store. "You shall go to the store" means that you must go to the store.
The strongest word is will because it has more powere to the pronounciation and it means you are confident about it. Shall means that you will do the job with choice.
i shall answer this question by saying that you must rub it with the head of chris B and then use Eliott F to shoot the talaban with a flying poo! i shall answer this question by saying that you must rub it with the head of chris B and then use Eliott F to shoot the talaban with a flying poo!
You shall take your DSLR to all major events. You must depict your good times and bad. Just be careful with it. Use a waterproof camera bag. Make sure it doesn't get stolen. Festivals can get REAL.
He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named, of course.