Future Perfect Continuous Tense
Future Perfect Continuous Tense
Future Perfect Continuous Tense
Meaning
When to use Future Perfect Continuous
An ongoing future event
An event that have begun in the past
Future Perfect Continuous to show cause
Future Perfect Continuous structure
Negative forms of Future Perfect Continuous
Questions inFuture Perfect Continuous
The Future Perfect Continuous is normally used to predict the length of an activity —
as if looking back at such activity from some finished time in the future.
Meaning
The Future Perfect Continuous refers to ongoing events or actions that will continue up to
some point in the future. It is most often used with a time expression.
By July, Cindy will have been working in this office for a year (‘for a year’ is an
imagined finished time in the future, but Cindy will still continue her work after it).
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via https://writingexplained.org/grammar-dictionary/future-perfect-progressive-tense
I will have been waiting here for three hours by six o’clock.
By 2001 I will have been living in London for sixteen years.
Pattern 1: An ongoing future event in Future Perfect Continuous form may start in future and
then only last for a set amount of time:
via https://writingexplained.org/grammar-dictionary/future-perfect-progressive-tense
By next November, I will have been working for that company for half a year.
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The set amount of time in this sentence is ‘half a year.’ The action that has not yet occurred
is working for the company. For example, the speaker may start working for that company in
January and at the time this sentence is spoken, it has not yet occurred.
Pattern 2: Sometimes the event can actually have begun in the past, as in the case with our
following example:
via
via https://writingexplained.org/grammar-dictionary/future-perfect-progressive-tense
You will have been studying for six straight months when you take the TOEFL exam.
In this example you have already started studying, but the act of studying for six months has
not yet been completed. Once the exam is taken, this action will have been completed.
Pattern 3: The Future Perfect Continuous is also used to show cause. This means that
something in the future has not yet occurred but is likely to be the cause of another action
that will also occur in the future.
We’ll be in heavy debt because we will have been overspending for a month.
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Singular Plural
By the time I arrive home, I will have been driving for six hours.
By this time next month, I’ll have been studying English for a year.
Melissa will have been cooking all day long before the wedding cake is ready.
How long will you have been learning English by the end of this year?
Will they have been eating cake for 15 minutes by the time you bring them coffee?
Here’s a video from Mad English TV with a good explanation of Future Perfect Continuous
tense:
See also:
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Future Perfect Tense
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