Also
is going to talk -- The auctioneer is going to talk fast
The future tense of talks is "will talk"
There are no future tense verbs in this sentence.The only verb is talks, and that is present
The future tense is will mail.
Busy is not a verb and therefore does not have a past tense.
Will receive.
The future tense of reply is will reply.Alsopresent continuous with a time phrase:I am replying to his request tomorrow.be + going to + verb:I am going to reply to his request tomorrow.
The future tense form of the verb "talks" in the sentence "the auctioneer talks fast" is "will talk." So, the sentence in future tense would be "the auctioneer will talk fast."
There are no future tense verbs in this sentence.The only verb is talks, and that is present
The future tense of the verb 'auctioneer' is 'will auctioneer'. However, bear in mind that the word 'auctioneer' is almost always used as a noun (though it can legitimately be used as a verb) and that nouns do not have tenses.
The future perfect tense talks about the past in the future. For example: I will have finished.
future tense
The future tense verb for the sentence "The outline is ready" would be "will be." So the future tense sentence would be "The outline will be ready."
There is no future tense verb in this sentence. The sentence is present simple (is).
Simple future
Yes, a sentence can contain both past tense and future tense verbs. For example, "She will have finished the project by the deadline." In this sentence, "will have finished" is future tense and "by the deadline" indicates a future event from the perspective of the past tense "finished."
The tense of the verb "clean" in the sentence is future tense, indicated by the auxiliary verb "will."
"A dog will bark" is that sentence in the future tense.
The tense in the sentence is future tense, specifically the simple future tense. It indicates that the action of staying with their grandmother will happen in the future.