The future tense is used to talk about something that hasn't happened yet but is going to happen at some point in the future.
For example: I will study.
That is in future tense...
It also use the auxiliary verb "will".The future perfect tense follows this structure:Subject + Will + Have + Past Participle.e.g. I will have danced.
Will have gone.
The future tense is will bite.
The future tense of done is will do.
That is in future tense...
Past - there is nothing like that to use grammatically, but the natural replacement is 'Was'. Future - will be.
Future tense.
Yes. For example, "They have in their possession..." can be changed from present tense to future tense by changing it to "They will have in their possession..."
Past tense - calculated. Present tense - I/you/we/they calculate. He/she/it calculates. Future tense - will calculate.
No. The word "are" is present or future tense. The past tense would be "were".
The spelling will stay the same as present tense. The use of "will" in front as an adverb determines the future tense (e.g. ' I will assign seats tomorrow. ' ).
No, -ed is used for the past tense.
It also use the auxiliary verb "will".The future perfect tense follows this structure:Subject + Will + Have + Past Participle.e.g. I will have danced.
The Future tense of migrate is "Will migrate", the word (will) or (shall) can be use when the sentence is future. EX: My parents (migrate) "will migrate" to Canada next year
The past tense is used to describe actions that have already happened, while the future tense is used to talk about actions that have not yet occurred but are expected to happen in the future. Use the past tense for events that have been completed, and the future tense for events that will take place.
Were is a past tense form of be. The future tense of be is will be.