Malagas is the language spoken most commonly in Madagascar. (Researched for school project, pardon me if I`m wrong)
The culture of Madagascar is Malagas. ( Researched for a project)
The culture of Madagascar is Malagas. ( Researched for a project)
You can only plan IN the present but you can plan FOR the future.
The past tense of "plan" is "planned." The future tense of "plan" is "will plan."
Will plan.
The future tense of the verb "plan" is "will plan".
The past tense of "plan" is "planned." The future tense of "plan" is "will plan."
The past tense of "plan" is "planned." The future tense of "plan" is "will plan."
The future tense of plan iswill + verb -- We will plan our route this evening.be + going to + verb -- They are going to plan an attack.be + present participle -- He is planning a party for the weekend.
Organisations must plan for the future. The only reason you wouldn't plan for the future is if you want to ensure total chaos and a complete collapse of the organisation. In fact, the more detailed your future plan(s), the more likely you are to succeed. If your only plan is: "We will open tomorrow at 9am and these are the people who should report to work", you won't go very far. If you are concerned that some specific future event might make your plan ineffective, you need a second contingency plan. While you might not want to prepare for every possible future event, you can plan how you will react to unplanned events. They say: If you fail to plan, you plan to fail! I like the saying: Plan your work and work your plan.
The future tense of plan iswill + verb -- We will plan our route this evening.be + going to + verb -- They are going to plan an attack.be + present participle -- He is planning a party for the weekend.