Future Perfect Tense
Definition: The future perfect tense refers to a completed action in the future. It expresses a sense of completion of an action which will occur in future.
Example: Ram will have gone tomorrow. It shows a sense of completion of an action (go) which will occur in future (tomorrow).
This Tense Can Be Used In 1 Case:
1. Refers to a completed action in the future. When we use this tense we are projecting ourselves forward into the future and looking back at an action that will be completed some time later than now. It is most often used with a time expression.
Example:
1. I will have been here for six months on June 23rd.
2. By the time you read this I will have left.
Rule For How To Make Tense:
If Sub=I, You, Singular or Plural (for all subjects)
1. Sub+will+have+Verb 3rd form
2. Sub+won’t+have+Verb 3rd form
3. How+will+Sub+have+Verb 3rd form
4. Why+won’t+Sub+have+Verb 3rd form
More Examples:
Affirmative:
- The teacher will have taught French.
- I will have informed him everything.
- She will have written the lyric.
- The children will have reached market.
- She will have proved her honesty.
Negative:
- She will not have got so much cold before.
- They will not have submitted their applications.
- The government will not have been kind to the citizen.
- I will not have felt so hungry.
- It will not have rained for two years.
Interrogative:
- Will you have had your dinner?
- Will she have withdrawn her money?
- Why will they have left the city?
- Why will you have been there?
- What will they have decided by then?