The future tense for "I work very hard" can be expressed as "I will work very hard." This indicates that the action of working hard will take place in the future. Another form could be "I am going to work very hard," which also suggests a planned action.
What is the future tense of this sentence, "I work very hard."
I will work very hard.
Present tense: work/works/working Past tense: worked. Future tense: will work.
Some examples: Past tense - worked. Future tense - will work. Past tense - played. Future tense - will play. Past tense - lied. Future tense - will lie.
The simple future tense follows this structure:Subject + Will + VerbFor example:I will work.
The present tense of work is work (I work, you work, he works, she works, it works, we work they work). The present continuous - am/is/are working; the present perfect - have/has worked; the present perfect continuous - have/has been working.
will work
Will flourish Will have flourished Those both can work.
The past tense of do is did. "We did a lot of work today. "The future tense of do is:will do - I will do the washing tonight.be + going to do - I am going to do my homework tomorrow night.be + doing - I am doing my homework later.
it takes 2 years of very hard work. but good luck for the future it takes 2 years of very hard work. but good luck for the future
The future tense of "left" is "will leave." For example, "I will leave for work at 9 am tomorrow."
Walk - walked - will walk. Work - worked - will work. Play - played - will play. Laugh - laughed - will laugh is was are