Information about Future Tense
In linguistics, a future tense is a verb form that marks the event described by a verb as not having happened yet, but expected to in the future.
The tradition that English has a future tense traces to the period of 300 years, from 1066 to about 1350, when Anglo-Norman was the official language of England. Norman, unlike English, is a Romance language; and the Romance languages, unlike Germanic languages, do have a simple future tense.
The most common auxiliary verbs used to express futurity are will, should, can, may, and must. Of these, "will" is the most neutral and it is the most commonly used. "Should" implies obligation or commitment to the action contemplated. "Can" implies the ability to commit the action but does not presuppose obligation or firm commitment to the action. "May" expresses the least sense of commitment and is the most permissive; it is also a verb used in the auxiliary construction that suggests conditionality. "Must," by contrast, expresses the highest degree of obligation and commitment ("I must go") and is temporally nearest to present time in its expression of futurity ("I must go now.")
To wit:
This reality, that expression of futurity in English is a function of the present tense, is born out by the ability to negate the implication of futurity without making any change to the auxiliary construction. When a verbal construction that suggests futurity (such as "I shall go") is subsequently followed by information that establishes a condition or presupposition, or the active verb stem itself contradicts a future indicative application of the construction, then any sense of future tense is negated - especially when the auxiliary will is used within its literal meaning, which is to voluntarily 'will' an action. For example:
'''For example: A: Will he be at the café at six o'clock? B: He will be there. [Normal affirmation] BUT B: He shall be there. [Stresses that this is not the usual pattern that was previously established or to be expected (Last time he was late or did not show up)] '''
Additional auxiliary constructions used to express futurity are labelled as follows:
Future Continuous: Auxiliary + Verb Stem + Present Participle
amabo I will (shall) love amabis You (singular) will love amabit He, she, it will love amabimus We will (shall) love amabitis You (plural) will love amabunt They will love
This method of producing the future tense in Latin was replaced in the Romance languages by another form using the infinitive plus an ending.
As in English, this periphrastic construction is also available in the past, by conjugating aller to the imperfect: j'allais voir "I was going to see". Depending on grammatical context, this can sometimes be done with the conditional: Le lendemain, il reconnaîtrait son erreur (The day after, he would recognize his mistake).
Confusingly, Catalan uses the verb anar for periphrastic constructions both in the future (with the preposition a) and the past (without the preposition). In other words, jo vaig a veure is "I will see"; jo vaig veure is "I saw."
Many Romance languages use the future tense also to refer to a supposition or a statement about habit, for example in Spanish: serán las once ("It will be 11 o'clock," meaning "I suppose it's around 11, it must be 11 by now"). This construction is also found in German.
manger- to eat - futur simple stem Je mangerai I will eat ir- to go - futur simple stem Nous irons We will go
The futur simple usually refers to events that will happen further away in time than the futur proche.
The formations of some of the common irregular verbs are:
acheter = j'achèterai
aller = j'irai
appeler = j'appellerai
appuyer = j'appuierai
avoir = j'aurai
devoir = je devrai
employer = j'emploierai
envoyer = j'enverrai
être = je serai
faire = je ferai
pouvoir = je pourrai
recevoir = je recevrai
savoir = je saurai
venir = je viendrai
voir = je verrai
vouloir = je voudrai
Aller: Je vais, Tu vas, Il/Elle/On va, Nous allons, Vous allez, Ils/Elles vont.
Note: There is no distinction between the English present and present continuous tenses. Je vais = I go, I am going
Examples: J'aurai fini = I will have finished Il aura mangé = He will have eaten Je serai parti = I will have left Il sera venu = He will have come
The past participle of a regular verb ends in either -i, -é or u.
finir --> fini
manger --> mangé
rendre --> rendu
There are many verbs, however, that end in "voir" that are shortened to the first letter of the verb plus "u".
devoir --> dû
voir --> vu
pouvoir --> pu
savoir --> su
The English equivalent is "will/shall verb."
Note that these irregular stems are also used in the conditional tense.
Example: Voy a comprar 'I'm going to buy'
The English equivalent is "will have past participle of verb."
The copula is bidh (will be), cha bhi (will not be), am bi (interrogative), and nach bi (negative interrogative).
Like most Celtic languages, there is no simple way of forming the future tense. Normally a verb is used to pro-long or decrease the time the subject whilst using the future tense.
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Spanish, Castilian}}}
Writing system: Latin (Spanish variant)
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: —
ISO 639-3: —
Spanish (
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Future tense in English
In English, as in most Germanic languages, there is no simple future tense. Futurity is expressed either by using words that imply future action ("I go to Berlin tomorrow.") or by employing an auxiliary construction that combines certain present tense verbs with the stem of the verb which represents the true action of the sentence.The tradition that English has a future tense traces to the period of 300 years, from 1066 to about 1350, when Anglo-Norman was the official language of England. Norman, unlike English, is a Romance language; and the Romance languages, unlike Germanic languages, do have a simple future tense.
The most common auxiliary verbs used to express futurity are will, should, can, may, and must. Of these, "will" is the most neutral and it is the most commonly used. "Should" implies obligation or commitment to the action contemplated. "Can" implies the ability to commit the action but does not presuppose obligation or firm commitment to the action. "May" expresses the least sense of commitment and is the most permissive; it is also a verb used in the auxiliary construction that suggests conditionality. "Must," by contrast, expresses the highest degree of obligation and commitment ("I must go") and is temporally nearest to present time in its expression of futurity ("I must go now.")
To wit:
- I shall/will go
- I should go
- I can go
- I may go
- I must go
- I shall/will not go
- I should never go
- I cannot go
- I may never go
- I must not go
- Note that some commentators, especially in England, prefer that the first person, whether 'I' or 'we' decline with 'shall' as the auxiliary and that the other two persons decline with 'will'. This does not describe, nor has it ever described, common usage anywhere in the world, although there are people who follow it. [1] It was originally suggested in Chambers's 17th century grammar.
This reality, that expression of futurity in English is a function of the present tense, is born out by the ability to negate the implication of futurity without making any change to the auxiliary construction. When a verbal construction that suggests futurity (such as "I shall go") is subsequently followed by information that establishes a condition or presupposition, or the active verb stem itself contradicts a future indicative application of the construction, then any sense of future tense is negated - especially when the auxiliary will is used within its literal meaning, which is to voluntarily 'will' an action. For example:
- Person A says: "You will go now. You will not stay."
- Person B answers: "I shall go nowhere. I will stay."
'''For example: A: Will he be at the café at six o'clock? B: He will be there. [Normal affirmation] BUT B: He shall be there. [Stresses that this is not the usual pattern that was previously established or to be expected (Last time he was late or did not show up)] '''
Additional auxiliary constructions used to express futurity are labelled as follows:
Future Continuous: Auxiliary + Verb Stem + Present Participle
- I shall/will be going
- You will be singing
- He will be sleeping
- We may be coming
- They may be travelling
- It will be snowing when Nancy arrives
- It will not be raining when Josie leaves
- I shall/will be gone
- You will have sung
- He will have slept
- We may have come ("We may be come" can still be used poetically, but it is obsolete in speech)
- They may have travelled
- It will have snowed
- It will not have rained
- I shall/will have been going
- You will have been singing
- He will have been sleeping
- We may have been coming
- They may have been travelling
- It will have been snowing
- It will not have been raining
Future tense in Latin
The future tense forms in Latin varied by conjugation. Here is a sample of the future tense for the first conjugation verb 'amare', 'to love'.amabo I will (shall) love amabis You (singular) will love amabit He, she, it will love amabimus We will (shall) love amabitis You (plural) will love amabunt They will love
This method of producing the future tense in Latin was replaced in the Romance languages by another form using the infinitive plus an ending.
Future tenses and periphrastic constructions in Romance languages
Languages that have a true future tense include the Romance languages; most also have a periphrastic construction, like English. For example, French has a true future tense j'aimerai, tu aimeras, il aimera, "he will love" (from aimer, to like and il a, he has, so it's literally "He has to love"), but the future is most commonly expressed with the verb aller as an auxiliary: je vais aimer, tu vas aimer, il va aimer.As in English, this periphrastic construction is also available in the past, by conjugating aller to the imperfect: j'allais voir "I was going to see". Depending on grammatical context, this can sometimes be done with the conditional: Le lendemain, il reconnaîtrait son erreur (The day after, he would recognize his mistake).
Confusingly, Catalan uses the verb anar for periphrastic constructions both in the future (with the preposition a) and the past (without the preposition). In other words, jo vaig a veure is "I will see"; jo vaig veure is "I saw."
Many Romance languages use the future tense also to refer to a supposition or a statement about habit, for example in Spanish: serán las once ("It will be 11 o'clock," meaning "I suppose it's around 11, it must be 11 by now"). This construction is also found in German.
Future tense in French
French has three forms of future tense: the futur proche, the futur simple, and the futur antérieur.Future simple
The future simple is made by simply taking the infinitive of the verb and adding the correct form of avoir (to have) to the end of the word. In the nous and vous form of the word, the ending is instead just -ons and -ez, respectively. However, there are also some French verbs for which an irregular stem is used, such as aller (to go, futur simple stem = ir-), avoir (to have, futur simple stem = aur-) and etre (to be, futur simple stem = ser-). Note, the stem always ends in "r". For instance:manger- to eat - futur simple stem Je mangerai I will eat ir- to go - futur simple stem Nous irons We will go
The futur simple usually refers to events that will happen further away in time than the futur proche.
The formations of some of the common irregular verbs are:
acheter = j'achèterai
aller = j'irai
appeler = j'appellerai
appuyer = j'appuierai
avoir = j'aurai
devoir = je devrai
employer = j'emploierai
envoyer = j'enverrai
être = je serai
faire = je ferai
pouvoir = je pourrai
recevoir = je recevrai
savoir = je saurai
venir = je viendrai
voir = je verrai
vouloir = je voudrai
Futur proche
The future proche uses the correct present form of aller (to go) and then has the infinitive after: je mange, je vais manger = I eat, I am going to eat.Aller: Je vais, Tu vas, Il/Elle/On va, Nous allons, Vous allez, Ils/Elles vont.
Note: There is no distinction between the English present and present continuous tenses. Je vais = I go, I am going
Futur Antérieur
Equivalent of English I shall have [verb]. Formed by using the future form of avoir or être, plus the past participle.Examples: J'aurai fini = I will have finished Il aura mangé = He will have eaten Je serai parti = I will have left Il sera venu = He will have come
The past participle of a regular verb ends in either -i, -é or u.
finir --> fini
manger --> mangé
rendre --> rendu
There are many verbs, however, that end in "voir" that are shortened to the first letter of the verb plus "u".
devoir --> dû
voir --> vu
pouvoir --> pu
savoir --> su
Irregular verb stems in Future Tense
| Irregular Verb | Irregular Verb Stem | Similar Irregular Verbs |
| acheter | achèter- | achever, amener, emmener, lever, promener |
| appeler | appeller- | épeler, jeter, projeter, rappeler |
| aller | ir- | |
| avoir | aur- | |
| devoir | devr- | recevoir, etc. |
| envoyer | enverr- | |
| essayer | essaier- | employer, ennuyer, nettoyer, payer |
| être | ser- | |
| faire | fer- | |
| falloir | faudr- | |
| mourir | mourr- | |
| pleuvoir | pleuvr- | |
| pouvoir | pourr- | |
| savoir | saur- | |
| valoir | vaudr- | |
| venir | viendr- | revenir, devenir, parvenir |
| voir | verr- | revoir |
| vouloir | voudr- |
Future Tense in Spanish
In Spanish, there are two main tenses that describe the future: the futuro simple, and the futuro perfecto.Futuro Simple
The futuro simple is formed by, excluding the irregular verbs (e.g. querer, to want, or salir, to go out), appending the following to the end of the infinitive form of a verb:| Ending | Verb Form |
| -é | 1st person singular |
| -ás | 2nd person informal singular |
| -á | 3rd person singular, 2nd person formal singular |
| -emos | 1st person plural |
| -éis | 2nd person informal plural |
| -án | 3rd person plural, 2nd person formal plural |
The English equivalent is "will/shall verb."
Irregular Stems of the Futuro Simple
Irregular stems include:| Verb (Meaning) | Stem |
| salir (to go out) | saldr- |
| venir (to come) | vendr- |
| tener (to have) | tendr- |
| poner (to put) | pondr- |
| poder (to be able) | podr- |
| valer (to be worth) | valdr- |
| haber (to have) | habr- |
| satisfacer (to satisfy) | satisfar- |
| saber (to know) | sabr- |
| caber (to fit) | cabr- |
| hacer (to do, to make) | har- |
| decir (to say, to tell) | dir- |
| querer (to want) | querr- |
Note that these irregular stems are also used in the conditional tense.
Other ways of expressing future
Spanish uses combinations of two verbs, where one is used as an auxiliary one. One of the most common structure to express future is "ir" + <infinitive>.Example: Voy a comprar 'I'm going to buy'
Futuro Perfecto
The futuro perfecto is formed by using the simple future form of the verb haber, to have, and the past participle of the desired verb.The English equivalent is "will have past participle of verb."
Future tense in Scottish Gaelic
In Gaelic, the future tense is formed in regular verbs by adding aidh or idh to the end of the root form of the verb (idh is used if the final vowel in the root is i).- Danns mi. (I dance.) -> Dannsaidh mi. (I will dance.)
- Èirich i. (She gets up.) -> Èirichidh i. (She will get up.)
- Cha dhèanamh e i... (He won't do it...)
- Chan fheuch peasan sin idir. (This brat won't try at all.)
- An ith thu sin? (Are you going to eat that?)
- Am pòg thu i? (Will you kiss her?)
The copula is bidh (will be), cha bhi (will not be), am bi (interrogative), and nach bi (negative interrogative).
- Bidh mi a' tighinn! (I'm coming!)
- Cha bhi e seo a-màireach. (He won't be here tomorrow.)
- Am bi thu air falbh as t-Samhradh? (Will you be away this summer?)
- Nach bi sibh a' fuireach airson am biadh? (Won't you stay for the food, sir?)
- Tha ise ag ràdh gum bi esan a' dol. (She said that he will go.)
- Tha mi 'n dòchas nach bi iad sgìth. (I hope that they won't be sick.)
Future Tense in Welsh
Yr Amser DyfodolLike most Celtic languages, there is no simple way of forming the future tense. Normally a verb is used to pro-long or decrease the time the subject whilst using the future tense.
- "Mynd" + "Bod" : 'to go' + 'to be' = Dwi'n mynd i dy gasáu: I am going to hate you
- Dwi'n mynd i'ch caniatáu: I am going to permit you.
- Dwi'n mynd yna heddiw: I am going there today.
See Also
External links
References
For the journal, see .
Linguistics is the scientific study of language, which can be theoretical or applied. Someone who engages in this study is called a linguist...... Click the link for more information.
English}}}
Writing system: Latin (English variant)
Official status
Official language of: 53 countries
Regulated by: no official regulation
Language codes
ISO 639-1: en
ISO 639-2: eng
ISO 639-3: eng
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Writing system: Latin (English variant)
Official status
Official language of: 53 countries
Regulated by: no official regulation
Language codes
ISO 639-1: en
ISO 639-2: eng
ISO 639-3: eng
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Germanic languages are a group of related languages constituting a branch of the Indo-European (IE) language family. The common ancestor of all languages comprising this branch is Proto-Germanic, spoken in approximately the latter mid-1st millennium BC in Iron Age Northern Europe.
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The Anglo-Norman language is an extinct variety of the Norman language used in England following the Norman conquest in 1066.
When William the Conqueror invaded England, he, his nobles and many of his followers from Normandy spoke an Oïl language called Norman.
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When William the Conqueror invaded England, he, his nobles and many of his followers from Normandy spoke an Oïl language called Norman.
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Norman}}}
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ISO 639-3: nrm
Areas where the Norman language is strongest include Jersey, Guernsey, the Cotentin and the Pays de Caux.
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Writing system: Latin (French variant)
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ISO 639-2: roa
ISO 639-3: nrm
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Romance languages (sometimes referred to as Romanic languages) are a branch of the Indo-European language family that comprisies all the languages that descend from Latin, the language of the Roman Empire.
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Latin}}}
Official status
Official language of: Vatican City
Used for official purposes, but not spoken in everyday speech
Regulated by: Opus Fundatum Latinitas
Roman Catholic Church
Language codes
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ISO 639-2: lat
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Official language of: Vatican City
Used for official purposes, but not spoken in everyday speech
Regulated by: Opus Fundatum Latinitas
Roman Catholic Church
Language codes
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Romance languages (sometimes referred to as Romanic languages) are a branch of the Indo-European language family that comprisies all the languages that descend from Latin, the language of the Roman Empire.
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French (français, pronounced [fʁɑ̃ˈsɛ]) is a Romance language originally spoken in France, Belgium, Luxembourg, and Switzerland, and today by about 300 million people around the world as either
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In Spain: Catalonia, Valencian Community, Balearic Islands, Aragon (in La Franja), Murcia (in El Carxe). In France: Northern Catalonia. In Italy: The city of L'Alguer. In Andorra.
Total speakers: 9.
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Total speakers: 9.
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Spanish, Castilian}}}
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ISO 639-3: —
Spanish (
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French (français, pronounced [fʁɑ̃ˈsɛ]) is a Romance language originally spoken in France, Belgium, Luxembourg, and Switzerland, and today by about 300 million people around the world as either
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French verbs are a complex area of French grammar, with a conjugation scheme that allows for three finite moods (with anywhere from one to five synthetic tenses), three non-finite moods, three voices, and two aspects.
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In linguistics, a future tense is a verb form that marks the event described by a verb as not having happened yet, but expected to in the future.
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Future tense in English
In English, as in most Germanic languages, there is no simple future tense...... Click the link for more information.
In grammar, infinitive is the name for certain verb forms that exist in many languages. In the usual (traditional) description of English, the infinitive of a verb is its basic form with or without the particle to: therefore, do and to do, be
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Shall and will are both modal verbs in English primarily used to express the future. However, neither shall nor will is the principal method of expressing what is going to happen in the future.
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Shall and will are both modal verbs in English primarily used to express the future. However, neither shall nor will is the principal method of expressing what is going to happen in the future.
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The conditional mood is the form of the verb used in conditional sentences to refer to a hypothetical state of affairs, or an uncertain event that is contingent on another set of circumstances.
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In linguistics, a participle is a non-finite verb form that can be used in compound tenses or voices, or as a modifier. Participles often share properties with other parts of speech, in particular adjectives and nouns.
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Shall and will are both modal verbs in English primarily used to express the future. However, neither shall nor will is the principal method of expressing what is going to happen in the future.
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Scottish Gaelic}}}
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Official language of: Scotland
Regulated by: Bòrd na Gàidhlig
Language codes
ISO 639-1: gd
ISO 639-2: gla
ISO 639-3: gla
Scottish Gaelic (Gàidhlig
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Official status
Official language of: Scotland
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ISO 639-2: gla
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Scottish Gaelic (Gàidhlig
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Lenition is a kind of consonant mutation that appears in many languages. Along with assimilation, it is one of the primary sources of the historical change of languages.
Lenition means 'softening' or 'weakening' (from Latin lenis
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Lenition means 'softening' or 'weakening' (from Latin lenis
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Grammatical tense is a way languages express the time at which an event described by a sentence occurs. In English, this is a property of a verb form, and expresses only time-related information.
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The past tense is a verb tense expressing action, activity, state or being in the past.
In English, there are two distinct types of past tense:
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In English, there are two distinct types of past tense:
- Present perfect (see perfect tense)
- Preterite (or simple past)
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Present Tense
(1968) The Blue Marble
(1969)
Present Tense is the first Sagittarius album, released in 1968 by Columbia Records.
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(1968) The Blue Marble
(1969)
Present Tense is the first Sagittarius album, released in 1968 by Columbia Records.
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