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Future perfect: B2- intermediate:


 

Future Perfect B2- intermediate: 馃摎


The Future Perfect (will + have + past participle) describes an action that will be completed before a specific time or another action in the future. It is commonly used at a B2-intermediate level with time markers like by, by the time, or in [duration], such as "By 8 p.m., I will have finished dinner". 


Key Structures (B2 Intermediate): 


* Positive: Subject + will + have + past participle (e.g., They will have arrived by 6).

* Negative: Subject + will not (won't) + have + past participle (e.g., She won't have finished).

* Question: Will + Subject + have + past participle? (e.g., Will you have eaten?).

* Contracted: Often used in speech: I'll have done it. 

Key Uses: 

* Action finished before a future time: "By next year, I will have graduated".

* Duration until a future time: "By 5 o'clock, I will have worked here for eight hours".

* Predicting completed past actions: "The meeting will have ended by now" (referring to a likely, unverified past action). 

Common Signal Words: 


* By / By the time: "By the time you read this, I will have left".

* In [time]’s time: "In two weeks' time, they will have moved house". 

Common Mistakes & Tips: 

* Verb Form: Always use the past participle (e.g., will have gone, not will have go).

* "Have" Sounds like "of": In spoken English, will have often sounds like "will of".

* Context: Unlike the Future Continuous, the Future Perfect emphasizes the completion of an action, not the process. 


The future perfect tense is used to describe an action that will be completed before a specific time in the future. It's formed with "will have" + past participle of the verb.


Examples:


- By December, I'll have finished my project.

- They'll have left by the time we arrive.


馃槉 Let's practice 馃槉.


- By August, I'll have learned to dance merengue.


- By next summer, they'll have visited Punta Cana twice.


- By the end of the year, we'll have explored the whole island.


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