What approach do financial managers prefer future or present value?
Financial managers tend to prefer using the present value technique, because it's much easier to make decisions at time zero with present values than future values.
What is the future tense of forms?
will + form -- We will form a new committee next meeting.
be+going to + form -- We are going to form a new committee next meeting.
be + forming -- We are forming a new committee next month.
What is the future tense of will occur?
"will occur" is future tense. The present tense is occur, and the past tense is occurred.
What is the future perfect tense of come?
Future perfect is: subject + will + have + past participle.
He will have come / They will have come / I will have come
Can you freeze yourself to go into the future?
Yes, there are companies that will freeze you and keep you in a cooler. Problem is, no one now knows how to defrost you in the future without killing you.
What is the future tense of the word received?
The future tense of "received" is "will receive." For example, "I will receive the package tomorrow."
What is the future perfect tense of break?
The future perfect tense of "break" is "will have broken."
What is the future tense of spy?
There really is no future tense conjugation that you directly attach to verbs in the English language. If you were to talk about doing something in the future, for example spy, you would just say something like "I will be spying" or "I am going to spy".
What is the futere tense of juggle?
I shall juggle
You will juggle
He will juggle
We shall juggle
You (pl.) will juggle
They will juggle
What is future tense for answer?
Will answer.
going to answer
am/is/are answering
I will answer the phone if it rings.
They are going to answer my questions tomorrow.
The President is answering the questions at a meeting tomorrow.
The expressions...
(1) ''I will answer after I have received the letter", and
(2) "I will answer after I receive the letter"
... both mean the same thing.
The only difference is the choice of verb form. The first sentence uses the 'Present Perfect with future meaning'. The second sentence uses the the 'Present Simple for the future.'
In some situations the choice between the two verb forms is important, but in this particular case the meaning is clear and unambiguous, whichever style of speech the speaker uses.