The word 'future' is a noun, a word for the time after now, a word for a thing; and an adjective, a word that describes a noun.
Examples:
I save money for my child's future. (noun)
We'll have to reschedule on a future date. (adjective)
A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'future' is 'it'.
Example: He will do well in the future. He is ready for whatever it brings.
The subject pronoun with the verb to be means future or expectant.
No, time is not a pronoun. Time is a noun that refers to the indefinite continued progress of existence and events in the past, present, and future.
They'll is contraction of two parts of speech, they (pronoun) and will (verb).
"he'll" is a contraction contraction: shortening and joining together of 2 words he'll = he will "he" is a pronoun "will" is an auxiliary verb
The pronoun 'them' is a personal pronoun, the third person plural pronoun.
The subject pronoun with the verb to be means future or expectant.
The word "you" is a pronoun and so doesn't have a future tense. Only verbs have tenses.
(Noun/pronoun) will be tearing.
You = pronoun will walk = verb (future tense of walk) and = conjunction he= pronoun will ride = verb (future tense of ride) a = article bike = noun
No, time is not a pronoun. Time is a noun that refers to the indefinite continued progress of existence and events in the past, present, and future.
They'll is contraction of two parts of speech, they (pronoun) and will (verb).
It's the "their". A possesive pronoun indicates WHOSE something is ("whose car is this?", "her umbrella"). And use "quotes" in the future when "quoting" a sentence.
The word both is a pronoun and therefore doesn't have a tense. Only verbs have tenses.
You is a pronoun and would not have a tense. The verbs used with it would reflect the tense. Examples: future: you will present: you are past: you did
This will is future. This is a demonstrative pronoun and will is a verb or it may be a noun, depending on the rest of your sentence. But if the whole sentence is something like this: "This will of the late Dr. X was found in the top drawer", then THIS is a demonstrative pronoun and WILL can only be a noun. This is the only way that the two words can be used in a group.
"he'll" is a contraction contraction: shortening and joining together of 2 words he'll = he will "he" is a pronoun "will" is an auxiliary verb
The pronoun 'I' can never be used correctly with the verb 'is.'Correct ways of using 'is' in present, past, and future tense include:I am (PRESENT TENSE)I was (PAST TENSE)I will (FUTURE TENSE)She/he is (PRESENT TENSE)She/he was (PAST TENSE)She/he will (FUTURE TENSE)