The future perfect tense is quite an easy tense to understand and use. The future perfect tense talks about the past in the future.
The structure of the future perfect tense is:
subject | + | auxiliary verb WILL | + | auxiliary verb HAVE | + | main verb |
invariable | invariable | past participle | ||||
will | have | V3 |
Look at these example sentences in the future perfect tense:
subject | auxiliary verb | auxiliary verb | main verb | |||
+ | I | will | have | finished | by 10am. | |
+ | You | will | have | forgotten | me by then. | |
- | She | will | not | have | gone | to school. |
- | We | will | not | have | left. | |
? | Will | you | have | arrived? | ||
? | Will | they | have | received | it? |
In speaking with the future perfect tense, we often contract the subject and will. Sometimes, we contract the subject, will and have all together:
I will have | I'll have | I'll've |
you will have | you'll have | you'll've |
he will have she will have it will have | he'll have she'll have it'll have | he'll've she'll've it'll've |
we will have | we'll have | we'll've |
they will have | they'll have | they'll've |
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The future perfect tense expresses action in the future before another action in the future. This is the past in the future. For example:
The train will have left when you arrive. | ||||||||
past | present | future | ||||||
Train leaves in future at 9am. | ||||||||
| ||||||||
You arrive in future at 9.15am. |
Look at some more examples:
You can sometimes think of the future perfect tense like the present perfect tense, but instead of your viewpoint being in the present, it is in the future: