I think shall is just a fancier, more old-fashioned way of saying should. Or maybe a more pushy way of saying it, an order. Here's an example:
We should go to the park at 4:00
We shall go to the park at 4:00
"Shall" is used to indicate a future action or to make a suggestion or offer. "Should" is used to indicate a recommendation or expectation, expressing a sense of obligation or duty.
"Shall" is used to indicate a requirement or future action, often in a formal or legal context. "Should" is used to express a recommendation, obligation, or likelihood. For example, "You shall attend the meeting" indicates a requirement, while "You should prepare for the presentation" gives advice.
"Shall" is used to express future tense or to make suggestions, offers, or promises. Whereas, "should" is used to indicate obligation, recommendation, or expectation. For example, "I shall arrive at 9 o'clock" and "You should finish your homework before going out."
"Shall" is used to indicate a strong recommendation or requirement, typically in a formal or contractual context. "Should" is used to express a milder recommendation or advice. For example, "You shall complete the assignment by Friday" implies it is mandatory, while "You should complete the assignment by Friday" suggests it is advisable but not mandatory.
Use "shall" for expressing a future action or intention, "should" for indicating a recommendation or expected outcome, and "must" for conveying a requirement or obligation. "Shall" is typically used in formal documents or legal contexts, while "should" and "must" are used in everyday language to express differing levels of necessity or urgency.
The future tense of "should" is "shall." For example, "I should study" would become "I shall study."
"Shall" is used to indicate a requirement or future action, often in a formal or legal context. "Should" is used to express a recommendation, obligation, or likelihood. For example, "You shall attend the meeting" indicates a requirement, while "You should prepare for the presentation" gives advice.
"Shall" is used to express future tense or to make suggestions, offers, or promises. Whereas, "should" is used to indicate obligation, recommendation, or expectation. For example, "I shall arrive at 9 o'clock" and "You should finish your homework before going out."
"Shall you" is more formal and old-fashioned, often used in invitations or offers. "May you" is typically used to give wishes or blessings to someone. Both phrases are somewhat formal and polite, so use them appropriately in situations where a higher level of decorum is required.
"Shall" is used to indicate a strong recommendation or requirement, typically in a formal or contractual context. "Should" is used to express a milder recommendation or advice. For example, "You shall complete the assignment by Friday" implies it is mandatory, while "You should complete the assignment by Friday" suggests it is advisable but not mandatory.
I shall tell you and you shall have the answer.
Shall Iuse like I have been working with ETV since
Traditionally,shall is used for the future tense with the first-person pronouns I and We. but presently in American English Shall is almost absolute no-one is using shall these days however In grammer when you are very deterministic about any task then you should use will . i.e. " I will do that Job asap " , it shows your determination for that particular task .
In present tense, "should" is used to indicate a suggestion, recommendation, obligation, or expectation. It is often used to give advice or express what is the right thing to do in a particular situation.
The strongest word is will because it has more powere to the pronounciation and it means you are confident about it. Shall means that you will do the job with choice.
Past should be used.
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.
Second person singular of shall. I'm assuming it's a word from a Bible translation you're reading. You should use a modern translation that you can understand.