No, it can't.
"Would be" is both a future tense and a conditional
Will flourish Will have flourished Those both can work.
Both the singular and plural future tense are "will jump." "Shall jump" is another option, although this is relatively rare in American English in the sense of a true future tense.
Tense refers to when an action takes place (past, present, future), while aspect refers to how the action is viewed in terms of completion or duration (simple, continuous, perfect). Both tense and aspect are used to convey specific meanings in a sentence.
NO!!!! They are both future tense. Correctly used it is ;- I/we shall (1st person ) You/he/she/they will (2nd/3rd person). However, many people do incorrectly interchange 'will/shall'.
"Would be" is both a future tense and a conditional
Both. Present tense: I/you/we/they get. Future tense: Will get.
Will flourish Will have flourished Those both can work.
'study' is both present and future tense e.g. "I will study tonight."
they are both correct it just depends on what tense the sentence is in. if the sentence is in pat tense it is may be required, but if it is in present tense it is may require. they are both correct it just depends on what tense the sentence is in. if the sentence is in pat tense it is may be required, but if it is in present tense it is may require.
The word both is a pronoun and therefore doesn't have a tense. Only verbs have tenses.
In the given sentence, "you" is a pronoun, "will go" is a future tense form of a verb, "to" is a preposition, "Mexico" and "Peru" are both nouns, and "and" is a conjunction.
Both the singular and plural future tense are "will jump." "Shall jump" is another option, although this is relatively rare in American English in the sense of a true future tense.
"Sleep" can be both a noun and a verb, so you can use it in the past, present, or future tense. For example, "I slept" (past tense), "I am sleeping" (present continuous tense), and "I will sleep" (future tense).
The past tense is wrote; the future tense is will write.
Blow. Example: The bomb will eventually blow. The wind will blow tomorrow. It is blow for both present and future tense. Unlike past tense-- the wind has blown down my house.
Tense refers to when an action takes place (past, present, future), while aspect refers to how the action is viewed in terms of completion or duration (simple, continuous, perfect). Both tense and aspect are used to convey specific meanings in a sentence.