Some examples are:
By the end of the week, I will have walked 25 miles.
All required reports will have been completed by the dates on which they are required.
Future Perfect Tense is used to express an action or a state of being that will occur some time in the future.(We use the helping verbs:- *shall *will)(Some signals are:- *tomorrow, a week from now, next year, or later)Examples:-(1) I will start reading my lessons later.(2) She will move into another house after a week.(3) We will have returned home by four o'clock.(4) By next month, I will begin to watch my favorite movies.(5) My uncle and aunt will marry next year.The future perfect verb tense indicates an action that will be completed by a specific time.ExampleBy the end of the week, I will have walked 25 miles.The future perfect tense expresses a belief that the action or linking of the verb will have been completed at a future time.Examples:(passive) All required reports will have been completedby the dates on which they are required.(active) By next year, I will have become richer than I am now.
Oh, dude, the future tense of "tall" is "will be tall." It's like predicting someone's height in the future, you know? So, if you see a kid now and think, "That kid will be tall," you're using the future tense of "tall."
Much does not have a past tense as it's not a verb. Only verbs have past tenses.Much is an adjective and does not have a past tense.
Some transitive verbs are:BringSendGiveMakeReadTake
made
Present tense,present perfect tense,future tense,future perfect tense,past tense,past perfect tense
present past and future tense only.......beautiful...chaichai
Urgency is a noun; it doesn't have a tense. Only verbs have tenses.
Tenses of compound verbs include continuous, perfect, and future tense verbs. Compound verbs can also be passive, for example the verb in "a hamburger was eaten by John" is passive.
1.the present(or infinitive)2.the past tense3.the past participle4.the present participle
1. Past tense 2. Present tense 3. Future tense 4. Past perfect tense 5. Present perfect tense 6. Future perfect tense
Some examples: Past tense - worked. Future tense - will work. Past tense - played. Future tense - will play. Past tense - lied. Future tense - will lie.
You is a pronoun and would not have a tense. The verbs used with it would reflect the tense. Examples: future: you will present: you are past: you did
The future tense is: I will be ready to learn about verbs.
The future tense is: I will be ready to learn about verbs.
Past tenseTo form a past tense of a regular verb, you simple add -ed. For example, 'laugh' becomes 'laughed'.For irregular verbs, the past form is a new word. For example, 'eat' becomes 'ate'. There is no easy way of learning this - you simply learn the verbs.Future perfect tenseThis talks about the past in the future. It follows this structure:Subject + Will + Have + Past Participle.For example: I will have finished.
The six basic tenses are:Past tensePast perfect tensePresent tensePresent perfect tenseFuture tenseFuture perfect tense