First and second conjugations: -bitur. Examples:
Third and fourth conjugations: -etur. Examples:
The entirety of the ending depends on which conjugation the verb you're using is in. For first and second conjugation verbs, the ending will be -bor (e.g. amabor, "I will be loved); for third, it will be -ar (e.g. attendar, "I will be noticed"); for third -io and fourth it will be -iar (e.g. capiar, I will be captured).
future passive
The passive infinitives arepresent: mitti "to be sent"perfect: missum (fem: missam) esse "to have been sent"future: missum (fem: missam) iri "to be about to be sent"future perfect: missum (fem: missam) fore"to be about to have been sent"The passive imperatives arepresent second-person singular: mittere "be sent" (one person)present second-person plural: mittimini "be sent" (more than one person)future second-person singular: mittitor "you shall be sent" (one person)future third-person singular: mittitor "he/she/it shall be sent"future third-person plural: mittuntor "they shall be sent"
Everybody's art work will have been seen by this time next week -- passive I will have seen everybody's art work by this time next week. -- active
No, will have been planned is the future perfect tense.
future passive third person neuter verb
To change the future perfect into passive voice, use the auxiliary verb "will have been" followed by the past participle of the main verb. For example, "The work will have been completed by the team" is the passive form of "The team will have completed the work."
The verb "clamaverunt" is in the perfect tense in Latin, indicating that the action is completed in the past.
A passive verb phrase is formed with -- be verb + past participle.eg is kept, was eaten, is being built,Future tense can be made using willor going to. So passive future verb phrases using the past participle of see (seen) are:will be seen -- You will be seen as soon as possible.going to be seen -- They are going to be seensoon.
The infinitive is "to be". The first person singular is "I am". The future is conjugated as follows: I will be you will be (singular) he, she or it will be we will be you will be (plural) they will be Examples (using abbrevations) are: I'll be late tomorrow. She will not be happy to hear that. You will be over the moon if you win.
The future tense of "reside" for a second person singular would be "you will reside."
I would guess it comes from the third conjugation verb "Ago, Agere, Egi, Actum" meaning To drive, To lead, To act, or To Do.Agenda looks like the future passive participle form.Agere minus the "re" ending = AgeAge + "nd" = Agend (This is the future passive participle stem.)Agend + a = Agenda (Plural Neuter ending most likely.)The word in Latin would mean something like "Things (that) will be done."
Pronouns don't have tenses for past, present, or future; verbs are the words with such tenses. Pronouns are distinguished by person (first, second, or third person), number (singular or plural), and gender (male, female, or neuter). The personal pronouns are I, you, we, he, she, it, me, us, him, her, they, them.