Attendant is not a verb: it is a noun or an adjective
Noun: someone who attends (e.g. parking attendant)
Adjective: in attendance, present (e.g. attendant dignitaries, attendant risks)
The verb is "to attend" and the simple conjugations are:
Present: I /you attend, he/she attends
Past: I/you/he/we attended
Future: I/we shall attend, you/he/they will attend (shall is seldom used informally)
The future tense of "write" is "will write." For example, "I will write a letter tomorrow."
The future perfect tense of the verb to write is will have written.
The verb is "will write"-- we use the helping verb "will" to show that the action (in this case, "write") occurs in the future tense.
"Shall visit" is a future verb tense. It indicates an action that will take place in the future.
Past tense - wrote Past participle - written Present tense - write/writes Present participle - writing Future tense - will write
To write "What will you do on Saturday" in simple future tense, you can use the structure "will" + the base form of the verb. The sentence is already in simple future tense, asking about a future action. You can also rephrase it as "What are you going to do on Saturday?" which still conveys the same meaning.
The future tense of the verb 'drip' is will drip.
The future tense of the verb "to be" is "will be." For example, "I will be happy."
the verb (action) is write
The word "has" is not a future perfect verb. It is a present tense verb that functions as a helping verb for forming perfect tenses. In future perfect tense, "has" is combined with the auxiliary verb "will have" to show an action that will be completed at some point in the future.
No.will + verb is a future verb tense.eg I will go to the beach tomorrow. She will seeme later.
The word write is a verb.