Structure of Future Perfect Tense
Subject + will + have + V3 + (Object)
When do we use Future Perfect Tense
When there are two situations happened in the future. Using "Future Perfect Tense" with the situation that happened first and using Future Simple Tense with another situation.
Marry will have gone already by the time you will be there.
I will have jumped to the water if the bear will come.
Future Continuous Tense
Structure of Future Continuous Tense
Subject + will + be + V ing + (Object)
When do we use Future Continuous Tense
When the situation happen in the future at a particular moment (shorter than Future Simple Tense.)
I will be moving the new house tomorrow around 10 am.
John will be interviewing the job at 9 am. tomorrow.
He will not be doing anything until his boss talks to him first.
Future Perfect Continuous Tense
Structure of Future Perfect Continuous Tense
Subject + will + have + been + V ing + (Object)
When do we use Future Perfect Continuous Tense
When we want to tell about the long situation that will happen in the future.
I will have been walking back home tomorrow for 3.5 hours.
He will have not been to China at least in the next 5 years.
The Passive Voice
Download this explanation in PDF here.
See all my exercises about the passive here.
An active sentence like I drank two cups of coffee has the subject first (the person or thing that does the verb), followed by the verb, and finally the object (the person or thing that the action happens to).
So, in this example, the subject is 'I', the verb is 'drank' and the object is 'two cups of coffee'.
But, we don't always need to make sentences this way. We might want to put the object first, or perhaps we don't want to say who did something. This can happen for lots of reasons (see the explanation further down the page). In this case, we can use a passive, which puts the object first:
Two cups of coffee were drunk (we can add 'by me' if we want, but it isn't necessary).
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