The third person plural future passive form of "to see" is "will be seen"
The italicized verb "examined" is in future perfect passive tense.
The future perfect third person conjugation for the irregular verb "become" is "will have become."
The correct singular third person conjugation of the verb "to be" in the future perfect tense is "will have been."
Does is the present tense, third person singular conjugation of the verb do. The past tense of do is did, and the future tense is will do.
No, "will be" is future conjugation of the verb "to be." It cannot function as a preposition.
A passive verb phrase is formed with -- be verb + past participle.eg is kept, was eaten, is being built,Future tense can be made using willor going to. So passive future verb phrases using the past participle of see (seen) are:will be seen -- You will be seen as soon as possible.going to be seen -- They are going to be seensoon.
The italicized verb "examined" is in future perfect passive tense.
It's future tense. See the following conjugation. I shall write you will write he/she/it will write ---------------------- we shall write you [all] will write they will write
future passive
The future perfect third person conjugation for the irregular verb "become" is "will have become."
The correct singular third person conjugation of the verb "to be" in the future perfect tense is "will have been."
The conjugation of to have:will have (future)have (present)had (past)
In the third and fourth conjugations of Latin verbs, the future tense is formed using the appropriate future tense endings attached to the verb stem. For the third conjugation, the future tense endings are -am, -es, -et, -emus, -etis, -ent. In the fourth conjugation, the endings are -iam, -ies, -iet, -iemus, -ietis, -ient. The stem for both conjugations is modified slightly to accommodate the future tense formation.
No, it is not an adverb. The conjugation "will make" is the future tense of the verb "to make".
Does is the present tense, third person singular conjugation of the verb do. The past tense of do is did, and the future tense is will do.
No, "will be" is future conjugation of the verb "to be." It cannot function as a preposition.
No, will have been planned is the future perfect tense.