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Wednesday, May 20, 2020

The 12 Basic English Tenses: Future Perfect Continuous


Future Perfect Continuous

The Future Perfect Continuous tense looks at the past from the future.

How do we make the Future Perfect Continuous Tense?

The structure of the Future Perfect Continuous tense is:

subject
+
auxiliary will
+
auxiliary have
+
auxiliary be
+
main verb
invariable
invariable
past participle
present participle
will
have
been
base + ing

For negative sentences in the Future Perfect Continuous tense, we insert not between will and have. For question sentences, we exchange the subject and will. Look at these example sentences with the Future Perfect Continuous:


subject
auxiliary verb

auxiliary verb
auxiliary verb
main verb

+
I
will

have
been
working
for four hours.
+
You
will

have
been
travelling
for two days.
-
She
will
not
have
been
using
the car.
-
We
will
not
have
been
waiting
long.
?
Will
you

have
been
playing
football?
?
Will
they

have
been
watching
TV?

Contraction with Future Perfect Continuous

In speaking with the Future Perfect Continuous tense, we often contract the subject and WILL:

I will
I'll
you will
you'll
he will
she will
it will
he'll
she'll
it'll
we will
we'll
they will
they'll
  • I'll have been driving for five hours.
  • She'll have been watching TV.
In negative sentences, we may contract with won't, like this:

I will not
I won't
you will not
you won't
he willnot
she will not
it will not
he won't
she won't
it won't
we will not
we won't
they will not
they won't
  • You won't have been drinking, will you?
  • We won't have been driving for long.

How do we use the Future Perfect Continuous Tense?

The Future Perfect Continuous tense is like the Future Perfect tense, but it expresses longer actions or states extending up to some specific event or time in the future. For example:
  • Ram starts waiting at 9am. I am late and cannot arrive before 10am. Ram will have been waiting for an hour by the time I meet him.
Ram will have been waiting for one hour when I arrive.
past
present
future

Ram starts waiting at 9am.



9
10


I will arrive in future at 10am.

Notice that the long action or state can start at any time in the pastpresent or future, but of course it always ends in the future.

Next Monday we will have been living here for exactly five years.
past
present
future


next
Mon.

5 yrs ago



Look at these examples:
  • He'll be tired when he gets here. He'll have been travelling all day.
  • How long will Jo have been working when he retires?
  • Next month I'll have been studying Chinese for two years.
  • Will you have been working when I arrive?
  • He won't have been studying long enough to qualify.
  • Next week Jane is going to swim from England to France. By the time she gets to France she'll have been swimming non-stop for over thirteen hours.


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