Yes and no.
If you want to say "I am going to eat" as the near-future of "eating", the Spanish is "Yo voy a comer" which requires two verbs "ir" (to go) and the verb that is going to be done.
If you want to say "I will eat" as the indicative future of "eating", the Spanish is "Yo comeré" which only requires the conjugation of the relevant verb.
Whenever you say "will" in spanish, you have to use some conjugation of the future tense. To conjugate verbs in the future tense, you leave the verb whole and add the future tense to the end. The future tense ending for 'He' is á He will eat: Comerá He will sing: Cantará He will be: Estará
The future tense is: I will be ready to learn about verbs.
The future tense is: I will be ready to learn about verbs.
The future tense of the sentence "Are you ready to learn about verbs?" would be "Will you be ready to learn about verbs?"
will, shall, are going to, am going to, is going to, won't, shan't, aren't going to, am not going to, isn't going to,
tense is for verbs ,, idiot
Government is a noun and does not have a future tense. Only verbs have tense. Govern is a verb, and the future tense is will govern.
Regular verbs in English look like this: infinitive: to answer present tense: I answer, we answer, you answer, he answers, they answer past tense: answered future tense: will answer
In Bulgarian there are just 9 tenses: -Present -Past tense of perfective verbs - Aorist(um) -Past tense of imperfective verbs - Imperfektum -Past perfect -Present perfect -Future -Future perfect -Future in past -Future in past perfect but english has got 12 tenses (indicative) and spanish 20 in indicative mood and 12 in subjunctive mood
Past tense verbs indicate actions that have already happened, while future tense verbs indicate actions that will happen. Verbs in the past tense often end in -ed or changed form to show the past action. Verbs in the future tense often use auxiliary words like "will" or "shall" to indicate the action will occur later.
In Spanish, there are three irregular verbs in the imperfect tense: ser, ir, and ver. These verbs have unique conjugations in the imperfect tense that do not follow the regular patterns of regular -ar, -er, or -ir verbs.
The future tense uses the auxiliary verb will.