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Future Perfect

The future perfect tense is used to describe an event that has not yet happened but is expected or planned to happen before another stated occurrence. more...

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Formation of the future perfect in English

In English, this tense is formed as such:

subject + shall or will have + past participle of verb = \"I shall have gone to the store by the time you come.\"

This is usually shortened with the contraction of 'll for shall or will: I'll have been hit, you'll have been paid, etc. To make this form negative, one simply adds \"not\" between \"will\" or \"shall\" and \"have.\" For the contracted form: I won't have been speaking, you won't have been speaking, etc.

Spanish future perfect

In Spanish, the future perfect is formed as such:

subject + future form of haber (auxiliary verb) + past participle = yo habré hablado (I will have spoken).

The future of haber is formed by the future stem \"haber\" + the endings -é, -ås, -å, -emos, -éis, -ån. The past participle of a verb is formed by adding the endings -ado and -ido to ar and er/ir verbs, respectively. However, there are a few irregular participles, some of the more common ones listed here:

abrir: abierto
cubrir: cubierto
decir: dicho
escribir: escrito
freĂ­r: frito
hacer: hecho
morir: muerto
poner: puesto
ver: visto
volver: vuelto

Be aware that verbs within verbs also have the same participle, for example, predecir (to predict) would be predicho; suponer (to suppose) would be supuesto. Also, satisfacer (to satisfy) is close to hacer (to do) in that the past participle is satisfecho.

To make the tense negative, one simply adds \"no\" before the form of haber: yo no habré hablado. For use with reflexive verbs, one puts the reflexive pronoun before the form of haber: from bañarse (to take a bath), yo me habré bañado; negative: yo no me habré bañado.

French future perfect

The French future perfect, called futur antérieur, is formed similarly to Spanish:

subject + auxiliary verb (avoir or ĂȘtre) + past participle = j'aurai parlĂ© (I will have spoken).

Verbs that use ĂȘtre in the past (\"House of Etre\" verbs, reflexive verbs) also use ĂȘtre in forming the present perfect. For example, \"je serai venu(e)\" uses the future of ĂȘtre because of the action verb, venir (to come), which uses ĂȘtre in the past.

To form the future form of the auxiliary verbs, one uses the future stem and adds the endings -ai, -as, -a, -ons, -ez, -ont. Both avoir and ĂȘtre have irregular future stems; while, with the exception of -re verbs, most verbs use the infinitive as the future stem (i.e. je parlerai, I will speak), the future stem of avoir is \"aur,\" and that of ĂȘtre is \"ser.\"

Read more at Wikipedia.org


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Prices current as of last update, 01/04/09 12:12am.


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