I think it would be 'will like'
there is no future tense
The future tense of done is will do.
The future tense is will weave.
The future tense is will bite.
The future tense is will like.
The future tense is will like.
I think it would be 'will like'
Were is a past tense form of be. The future tense of be is will be.
"Would be" is both a future tense and a conditional
No. That is the present tense; the future tense of that would be 'we will become', and the past tense would be 'we have become' or 'we became'.
The future tense for "carry" would be like "carrying"like if you say I'm going too be carrying a package.. isn't that future tense?!?There is also "carry" itself, like in the sentence 'I am going to carry the package'
No, "slide" is the present tense. The future tense would be "will slide".
liked/like/will like
'Would' implies a sort-of hypothetical; something like an 'if; then' statement. For example, "If I didn't have any money, what would I do?" So 'would it be' can work as future tense or as present tense, as long as there is something like a hypothetical in the statement being made. For example, "Would it be fine with you if I went to the shops tomorrow?" is a sort-of hypothetical future tense statement, while "Would it be fine with you if I was jumping now?" is a sort-of hypothetical present tense statement. It can work as future tense, but not quite as most future tense things do, so I'd need to know the sentence it's in to answer for sure.
That would be future tense.
The word "would" is predominantly used as a past tense form of "will" to indicate future-in-the-past events or hypothetical situations. It can also be used in conditional statements to express a future possibility or intention.