"happy to help her" does not contain a form of be and is not a sentence. There is no subject or verb.
The future tense of be is will be for all persons, singular and plural.
I/We/You/He/She/They will be happy to help her.
The future tense is will help.
The future tense is will help.
The future tense for "help" is "will help." For example: "Tomorrow, I will help my friend with his homework."
Will help.
The word "help" is in the present tense.The past tense is helped.The future tense is will help.
will help -- I will help you as soon as I can be + going to help -- The teacher is going to help us finish the writing be + helping -- I am helping Jack in the shop next week
helped
That would be rinsing...... Sorry if I didn't help....... :(
Grammarians say there is not a future tense, but that the meaning of future is expressed in other ways, using present tenses.In the sentence "I will be there soon", the verb is construed as being be, and will is a modal that, in this example, conveys the sense of futurity. The future sense is reinforced in this particular sentence by soon.In the sentence "Are you going to the game on Saturday?" the tense is described by grammarians by some such name as present continuous or present progressive. The adverbial phrase on Saturday is necessary as a marker of futurity. Without that phrase, the sentence could simply have a present sense: Pat meets Sam walking along the road and asks, "Are you going to the game?" meaning now. Then again, they may both, in the context of the previous dialogue, take the very same sentence to refer to a game in the future!There are many examples of conveying future sense in English without the help of a dedicated tense. "I must clean out that room" could mean right now or some time in the future. It can depend on how it is said, and on the context.
The three simple tenses of verbs are: present tense (action is happening now), past tense (action already happened), and future tense (action will happen). These tenses help indicate the timing of an action or event.
Example sentence - The clerk was happy to help inventory the goods for the company.
Future time clauses are dependent clauses that indicate an action or event that will happen in the future in relation to the main clause. They often begin with subordinating conjunctions like "when," "while," "as soon as," "before," "after," "as long as," or "until." These clauses help to provide temporal context and sequence of events in a sentence.