No, merely the Future of HAVE.
By the time I get there, she WILL HAVE LEFT the town. THIS is a Future Perfect.
By tomorrow, I will have had plenty of time.
Shall have plenty
Yes
This is in the future tense.
will/shall grab You also have the future continuous, perfect, and perfect habitual. Future Continous: shall/will be grabbing. Future Perfect: shall/will have grabbed. Future Perfect Habitual: shall/will have been grabbing.
In future perfect tense, "shall" is used with first person pronouns (I, we) while "will" is used with second and third person pronouns (you, he/she/it/they). For example: "I shall have finished my work by then" and "You will have completed the task by tomorrow."
The future tense of "sing" is "will sing" or "shall sing." For example, "She will sing at the concert tomorrow."
Shall have is in the future perfect tense. It is formed by combining the modal verb "shall" with the present perfect form of the main verb.
This is in the future tense.
will/shall grab You also have the future continuous, perfect, and perfect habitual. Future Continous: shall/will be grabbing. Future Perfect: shall/will have grabbed. Future Perfect Habitual: shall/will have been grabbing.
The future perfect tense of "see" is "will have seen." For example, "By next year, I will have seen all the famous landmarks in the city."
Present Perfect Tense: I have; You have; he, she, it has; we have, you have, they have Past Perfect Tense: I had; you had; he, she, it had; we had; you had; they had Future Perfect Tense: I shall have; you will have; he, she, it will have; we shall have; you will have; they will have Note: has is used in the third person, singular present perfect tense.
I will have sprung, or I shall have sprung.
Future: grab Perfect Future: Will grab or shall grab (not sure on this one)
No. There are other forms. Here are just a few, taking the verb to arrive: I will arrive tomorrow. I shall arrive tomorrow. I am going to arrive tomorrow. I arrive tomorrow. I might arrive tomorrow.
Future progressive verb refers to an action that will be taking place in the future and will be ongoing. It is formed by combining the helping verb "will" with the base form of the verb and adding "be" before the present participle form of the verb. For example, "will be swimming" indicates an action that will be in progress at a future point in time.
In future perfect tense, "shall" is used with first person pronouns (I, we) while "will" is used with second and third person pronouns (you, he/she/it/they). For example: "I shall have finished my work by then" and "You will have completed the task by tomorrow."
No single tense in English is called simply a "perfect" tense. Instead, there are present perfect, past perfect, and future perfect. For the verb "pull", these are "have [or has] pulled", "had pulled", and "will [or shall] have pulled" respectively.
The future tense of the verb "to wash" is "will wash" or "shall wash."In the English language there are two types of future tense: future and future perfect. The future tense indicates some action that will occur sometime in the future. The future perfect tense indicates some action that is going to start in the future and finish farther into the future. Examples of each are below:Future tense: I will wash. Or it can be: I shall wash.The action will happen sometime in the future.Future perfect tense: I will have washed.The action will start in the future and will be completed some time further into the future.I will wash
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.