It is future tense.
No, shall is the future tense.
Shall and Will can both be used as a present tense or a future tense. Neither can be used as a past tense. "Did" would be the past tense of both terms.
It's shall be
The future tense of "should" is "shall." For example, "I should study" would become "I shall study."
Shall is an auxiliary verb, that is it is used before and in conjunction with another verb, as in, ...shall go... or ...shall be. The past tense of shall is shouldand is typically used with another auxiliary verb such as have, as in, ...should have gone... or ...should have been.
It's future tense. See the following conjugation. I shall write you will write he/she/it will write ---------------------- we shall write you [all] will write they will write
Present Perfect Tense: I have; You have; he, she, it has; we have, you have, they have Past Perfect Tense: I had; you had; he, she, it had; we had; you had; they had Future Perfect Tense: I shall have; you will have; he, she, it will have; we shall have; you will have; they will have Note: has is used in the third person, singular present perfect tense.
The phrase shall have is a future tense; it is a prediction about what you are going to have in the future. Possibly the very near future ("I shall have a coffee and a donut").
The word “accept” in future tense takes up several forms such as 'will/shall accept', 'will/shall be accepting', 'will/shall have accepted', and 'will/shall have been accepting'.
present tense is get or getspast tense is got or gottenfuture tense is will (or shall) get
Yes it's future tense.
"Shall" is typically used to indicate future tense in English.