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  1. The future perfect tense is only used in a few situations, but it's still good to know it. Here's how to make it. Click here to download this explanation as a pdf. Click here to learn about how to USE this tense. The future perfect is made with the future simple of 'have' (will have) and the past participle.

  2. We use will have when we are looking back from a point in time in the future: By the end of the decade, scientists will have discovered a cure for influenza. I will phone at six o'clock. He will have got home by then. or looking back from the present: Look at the time. The match will have started.

  3. The formula for the future perfect tense is pretty simple: will have + [past participle]. It doesn’t matter if the subject of your sentence is singular or plural. The formula doesn’t change. When to use the future perfect tense. Sometimes, you can use the future perfect tense and the simple future tense interchangeably.

  4. The future perfect expresses the idea that something will occur before another action in the future. It can also show that something will happen before a specific time in the future. Examples: By next November, I will have received my promotion. By the time he gets home, she is going to have cleaned the entire house.

  5. Grammar explanation. Future continuous. We can use the future continuous ( will/won't be + - ing form) to talk about future actions that: will be in progress at a specific time in the future: When you come out of school tomorrow, I'll be boarding a plane. Try to call before 8 o'clock. After that, we'll be watching the match.

  6. Will have is used to form Future Perfect, to describe something that not simply takes place in the future, but is completed ("perfected") at some reference point in the future (which is usually specified).

  7. from English Grammar Today. Future perfect simple: form. We use will/shall + have + the -ed form of the verb. We use shall only for future time reference with I and we. Shall is more formal than will. Note: Shall I, shall we and shan’t I, shan’t we in future perfect questions are rare. Future perfect simple: use.