"Shall" is often considered a more formal or old-fashioned way of expressing future obligation or intention, and it can indicate a stronger sense of obligation or certainty compared to other modal verbs like "will." However, its usage can vary depending on context and can sometimes come across as overly formal in modern language.
"Shall" is typically used to indicate future tense in English.
The future tense of the word "drip" is "will drip."
Will care or shall care, depending on the context.
Should means ought to; it is an expression of what is desirable, what you want to happen. You should brush your teeth. Shall is just a prediction of what will happen (particularly in the first person); I shall eat a pickle today.
The usual rule given for the use of shall and will is that where the meaning is one of simple futurity, shall is used for the first person of the verb and will for the second and third: I shall go tomorrow; they will be there now. Where the meaning involves command, obligation, or determination, the positions are reversed: it shall be done; I will definitely go. However, shall has come to be largely neglected in favour of will, which has become the commonest form of the future in all three persons."shall" is a modal auxiliary, used to express a command / exhortation or what is likely to happen in the future. So, there isn't a present tense of the auxiliary verb "Shall"
The word definitive is an adjective. It describes something which has been explicitly defined.
A definitive word or phrase is words that make you sound like an important person. For example of a definitive word or phrase would be surely, without a doubt, clearly, definitely, positively.
The word "shall" is an auxiliary verb.
There is 2 syllables in the word Shall sha ll
You'll You will you shall same thing
There is no specific or definitive single word. It would depend on context. Me, them, her, him are some examples.
Shall is only has one tense (future).
Shall only has one syllable.
the opposite of a word the opposite of a word
No; shall and will are auxiliary verbs. An adverb is a descriptive word that modifies a verb. Shall and will do not, and therefore cannot be adverbs.
In the King James version the word - shall - appears 9838 times and the word - shalt - appears 1616 times
Type your answer here... denotation, definitive, concrete