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Future Perfect Tense

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The future perfect is an English verb form used to describe actions that will be complete at a particular moment in the future. This can be a time or date, or it can be another action.

This is not a common verb form. Less than .1% of English verbs are in the future continuous.

Keep reading to learn the rules and reasons for using and forming the future continuous, including loads of charts and examples!


Using the Future Perfect

Perfect verb tenses are used to describe an action that is complete before another action or point in time. With the future perfect, that time is in the future. This can be a time or date (next weekend, tomorrow at 5, on November 3rd) or it can be another action in the future.

Chart for Future Perfect Tense In English

Here are some example sentences:

The skyscraper isn't completely built yet, but when I go in June, they will have finished it.

You can come over at 8. We will have eaten dinner by then.

In these examples, the perfect action (will have finished, will have eaten ) will be complete before the other specific action (when I go in June) or time (at 8).

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Forming the Future Perfect

Formula with Will

To form the future perfect, we use the future form of the helping verb have—will have—and the perfect form of the main verb. No matter what the subject is, the verb form is:

subject + will have + perfect VERB

Conjugation

That means the conjugation chart is really easy!

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Formula with Going to

Because forming the future tenses with be going to is more complex and wordy, we almost never form the future perfect with be going to. In the rare situation that we might use it, the formula is:

subject + am/is/are + going to have + perfect VERB

Conjugation

Here is a conjugation table for the verb work with going to.

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Other Forms

Questions

In the future perfect, you have more than one helping verb. To make a question, move the subject after the first helping verb, will, but before the second helping verb, have.

Will you have eaten by 8?

Will they have finished the construction by the end of the year?

Will she have completed her degree by that time?

What will they have accomplished with this senseless war?

When will they have made a decision?

Negative Sentences

To form a negative, insert not between the first helping verb will and the second helping verb have. Here are some examples.

I will not have eaten by 8.

They will not have finished the construction by the end of the year.

She will not have completed her degree yet.

The Passive Voice

Making a passive sentence in the future perfect is extremely complex and extremely rare. We do not recommend making future perfect passive sentences. If for some reason you do need to make a passive sentence in the future perfect, use be in the future perfect (will have been) and then the perfect form of the main verb. 

The package will have been delivered by Friday afternoon.

All the food will have been eaten by the time we get there.


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