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Future perfect

The future perfect is a verb form or construction used to describe an event that is expected or planned to happen before a time of reference in the future, such as will have finished in the English sentence "I will have finished by tomorrow." It is a grammatical combination of the future tense, or other marking of future time, and the perfect, a grammatical aspect that views an event as prior and completed.

English edit

In English, the future perfect construction consists of a future construction such as the auxiliary verb will (or shall) or the going-to future and the perfect infinitive of the main verb (which consists of the infinitive of the auxiliary verb have and the past participle of the main verb). This parallels the construction of the "normal" future verb forms combining the same first components with the plain infinitive (e.g. She will fall / She is going to fall). For example:

  • She will have fallen asleep by the time we get home.
  • I shall have gone by then.
  • Will you have finished when I get back?

The auxiliary is commonly contracted to 'll in speech and often in writing, and the first part of the perfect infinitive is commonly contracted to 've in speech: see English auxiliaries and contractions. The negative form is made with will not or shall not; these have their own contractions won't and shan't. Some examples:

  • I'll have made the dinner by 6 PM.
  • He won't have done (or will not have done) it by this evening.
  • Won't you have finished by Thursday? (or Will you not have finished by Thursday?)

Most commonly the future perfect is used with a time marker that indicates by when (i.e., prior to what point in time) the event is to occur, as in the previous examples. However, it is also possible for it to be accompanied by a marker of the retrospective time of occurrence, as in "I will have done it on the previous Tuesday". This is in contrast to the present perfect, which is not normally used with a marker of past time: one would not say "I have done it last Tuesday", since the inclusion of the past time marker last Tuesday would entail the use of the simple past rather than the present perfect.

The English future perfect places the action relative only to the absolute future reference point, without specifying the location in time relative to the present. In most cases the action will be in the future relative to the present, but this is not necessarily the case: for example, "If it rains tomorrow, we will have worked in vain yesterday."[1]

The future perfect construction with will (like other constructions with that auxiliary) is sometimes used to refer to a confidently assumed present situation rather than a future situation, as in "He will have woken up by now."

The time of perspective of the English future perfect can be shifted from the present to the past by replacing will with its past tense form would, thus effectively creating a "past of the future of the past" construction in which the indicated event or situation occurs before a time that occurs after the past time of perspective: In 1982, I knew that by 1986 I would have already gone to prison. This construction is identical to the English conditional perfect construction.

An obsolete term found in old grammars for the English future perfect is the "second future tense."[2][3]

For more information, see the sections on the future perfect and future perfect progressive in the article on uses of English verb forms.

Spanish edit

In Spanish, the future perfect is formed as this:

yo

subject

I

 

+

 

habré

future of haber

will have

 

+

 

hablado

past participle

spoken

yo {} habré {} hablado

subject + {future of haber} + {past participle}

I {} {will have} {} spoken

The future of haber is formed by the future stem habr + the endings , -ás, , -emos, -éis, -án. 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 such as these:

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

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, no is simply added before the form of haber: yo no habré hablado. For use with reflexive verbs, the reflexive pronoun is before the form of haber: from bañarse ("to take a bath"), yo me habré bañado; negative: yo no me habré bañado.

Portuguese edit

In Portuguese, the future perfect is formed like in to Spanish:

subject + future of ter or haver + past participle
eu haverei falado ("I will have spoken")
eu terei falado ("I will have spoken")

The future of ter is formed by the future stem ter + the endings -ei, -ás, -á, -emos, -eis, -ão (the 2nd person plural form tereis is, however, archaic). The past participle of a verb is formed in turn by adding the endings -ado and -ido to the stems of -ar and -er/-ir verbs, respectively. However, there are a few irregular participles such as these:

abrir: aberto
cobrir: coberto
dizer: dito
escrever: escrito
fazer: feito
ganhar: ganho
gastar: gasto
pagar: pago
pôr: posto
ver: visto
vir: vindo

Several verbs that are derived from the irregular verbs above form their past participle similarly like the past participle of predizer ("to predict') is predito; for supor ("to suppose"), it would be suposto, and satisfazer ("to satisfy"), which is derived from fazer ("to do"), has the past participle satisfeito.

To make the sentence negative, não is simply added before the conjugated form of ter: eu não terei falado. When using the future perfect with oblique pronouns, European Portuguese and formal written Brazilian Portuguese use mesoclisis of the pronoun in the affirmative form and place the pronoun before the auxiliary verb in the negative form:

Eu tê-lo-ei visto ("I will have seen him")
Eu não o terei visto ("I will not have seen him")
Eles ter-me-ão visto ( "They will have seen me")
Eles não me terão visto ("They will not have seen me")

Informal Brazilian Portuguese usually places stressed pronouns such as me, te, se, nos and lhe/lhes between the conjugated form of ter and the past participle: eles terão me visto; in the negative form, both eles não terão me visto and eles não me terão visto are possible, but the latter is more formal and preferred in the written language.

Unstressed pronouns like o and a are normally placed before the conjugated form of ter: eu o terei visto; eu não o terei visto.

French edit

The French future perfect, called futur antérieur, is formed like in Spanish:

j'

subject

I

 

+

 

aurai

future of avoir or être

will have

 

+

 

parlé

past participle

spoken

j' {} aurai {} parlé

subject + {future of avoir or être} + {past participle}

I {} {will have} {} spoken

However, verbs that use être in the past ("House of Être" verbs, reflexive verbs) use être to form the present perfect. For example, je serai venu(e) uses the future of être because of the action verb, venir (to come), which uses être in the past.

To form the future form of the auxiliary verbs, the future stem is used, and the endings -ai, -as, -a, -ons, -ez, -ont are added. Both avoir and être have irregular future stems, but with the exception of -re verbs, most verbs use the infinitive as the future stem (je parler-ai, I will speak), the future stem of avoir "is" aur-, and the future stem of être is ser-.

To form the past participle in French, one usually adds , -i, and -u to the roots of -er, -ir, and -re verbs, respectively. However, there are many exceptions to this rule, including these commonly used ones (and all of their related verbs):

  • faire: fait
  • mettre: mis
  • ouvrir: ouvert
  • prendre: pris
  • venir: venu

Verbs related to mettre ("to put"): promettre ("to promise"); to ouvrir: offrir ("to offer"), souffrir ("to suffer"); to prendre ("to take"): apprendre ("to learn"), comprendre ("to understand"); to venir ("to come"): revenir ("to come again"), devenir ("to become").

When using être as the auxiliary verb, one must make sure that the past participle agrees with the subject: je serai venu ("I [masc.] will have come"), je serai venue ("I [fem.] will have come"); nous serons venus ("We [masc. or mixed] will have come"), nous serons venues ('We [fem.] will have come"). Verbs using avoir do not need agreement.

To make this form negative, one simply adds ne (n' if before a vowel) before the auxiliary verb and pas after it: je n'aurai pas parlé; je ne serai pas venu. For reflexive verbs, one puts the reflexive pronoun before the auxiliary verb: from se baigner ("to take a bath"), je me serai baigné; negative: je ne me serai pas baigné.

German edit

The future perfect in German (called "Futur II", "Vorzukunft" or "vollendete Zukunft") is formed like it is in English, by taking the simple future of the past infinitive. For that, the simple future of the auxiliary sein (= ich werde sein, du wirst sein etc.) or haben (= ich werde haben, du wirst haben, etc.) is used to enclose the past participle of the relevant verb (ich werde gemacht haben, du wirst gemacht haben, etc.):

  • Ich werde etwas geschrieben haben.
"I will have written something."
  • Morgen um diese Uhrzeit werden wir bereits die Mathe-Prüfung gehabt haben.
"Tomorrow at the same time we already will have had the math exam."
  • Es wird ihm gelungen sein.
"He will have succeeded."
  • Wir werden angekommen sein.
"We will have arrived."

Dutch edit

The Dutch future perfect tense is very similar to the German future perfect tense. It is formed by using the verb zullen ("shall") and then placing the past participle and hebben ("to have") or zijn ("to be") after it:

Ik zal iets geschreven hebben.
"I shall something written have."
"I will have written something."

Afrikaans edit

The Afrikaans future perfect tense is very similar to the Dutch future perfect tense. It is formed by using the verb sal ("shall") followed by the past participle and het (conjugated form of the verb ):

Ek sal iets geskryf (*) het.
"I shall something written have."
"I will have written something."

(*) Unlike in Dutch, almost all past participles in Afrikaans are regular (with a few exceptions like gehad and gedag). The Dutch strong participles are, however, sometimes preserved in Afrikaans when the participles are used as adjectives:

Dutch: Ik zal een brief geschreven hebben
Afrikaans: Ek sal 'n brief geskryf het
English: "I will have written a letter"
Dutch: een geschreven brief
Afrikaans: 'n Geskrewe brief
English: "a written letter"

Catalan edit

In Catalan, the future perfect is formed as this:

jo

subject

I

 

+

 

hauré

future of haver

will have

 

+

 

parlat

past participle

spoken

jo {} hauré {} parlat

subject + {future of haver} + {past participle}

I {} {will have} {} spoken

The future of haver is formed by the future stem haver + the endings , -às, , -em, -eu, -an. The past participle of a verb is formed by adding the endings -at, -ut and -it to ar, er, ir verbs, respectively. However, there are a few irregular participles such as these:

caldre: calgut
córrer: corregut
creure: cregut
dir: dit
dur: dut
empènyer: empès
entendre: entès
escriure: escrit
fer: fet
fondre: fos
haver: hagut
imprimir: imprès
morir: mort
obrir: obert
prendre: pres
resoldre: resolt
riure: rigut
treure: tret
valer: valgut
venir: vingut
viure: viscut

To make the tense negative, no is simply added before the form of haver: jo no hauré parlat. For use with reflexive verbs, the reflexive pronoun is before the form of haver: from banyar-se ("to take a bath"), jo m'hauré banyat; negative: jo no m'hauré banyat.

Greek edit

In Modern Greek, the future perfect is formed with the future particle θα tha, an auxiliary verb (έχω or είμαι écho, íme "to have" or "to be"), and the infinitive or participle.

  • "I will have finished by then"
    Θα έχω τελειώσει ... ("have" + infinitive)
    Tha écho teliósi ...
  • "I will be hired by then"
    θα είμαι προσληφθείς ... ("be" + participle)
    Tha ime proslipthis

In Ancient Greek, the future perfect of the active voice is most commonly formed periphrastically by combining the future tense of the verb "to be" with the perfect active participle, for example λελυκὼς ἔσομαι "I shall have loosed". In the middle and passive voice, the periphrastic construction is also very common, but a synthetic construction is found as well, by adding the endings of the future tense to the perfect stem, for example λελύσομαι "I shall have been loosed". The synthetic construction is rare, and found only with a few verbs.[4]

Latin edit

In Latin conjugation, the active future perfect is formed by suffixing the future forms of esse "to be" to the perfect stem of the verb. An exception is the active indicative third person plural, where the suffix is -erint instead of the expected -erunt. E.g. amaverint, not **amaverunt.

The passive future perfect is formed using the passive perfect participle and the future of esse. Note that the participle is inflected like a normal adjective, i.e. it agrees grammatically with the subject.

amāre
"to love"
active future perfect passive future perfect
Sg. 1st amāverō amātus -a -um erō
Sg. 2nd amāveris amātus -a -um eris
Sg. 3rd amāverit amātus -a -um erit
Pl. 1st amāverimus amātī -ae -a erimus
Pl. 2nd amāveritis amātī -ae -a eritis
Pl. 3rd amāverint amātī -ae -a erunt

Italian edit

The future perfect is used to say that something will happen in the future but before the time of the main sentence. It is called futuro anteriore and is formed by using the appropriate auxiliary verb "to be" (essere) or "to have" (avere) in the future simple tense followed by the past participle:

Io avrò mangiato ("I will have eaten")
Io sarò andato/a ("I will have gone")

It is also used for to express doubt about the past like the English use of "must have":

Carlo e sua moglie non si parlano più: avranno litigato ("Carlo and his wife are no longer talking: they must have quarrelled")

To translate "By the time/When I have done this, you will have done that", Italian uses the double future: Quando io avrò fatto questo, tu avrai fatto quello.

Romanian edit

The Romanian viitor anterior is used to refer to an action that will happen (and finish) before another future action. It is formed by the future simple tense of a fi (to be) followed by the participle of the verb.

Eu voi fi ajuns acasă deja la ora 11. ("I will have arrived home already at 11 o'clock.")

Serbian edit

It is usually restricted to conditional clauses. It is formed from a conjugated form of auxiliary verb biti ("to be") in the imperfective aspect plus past participle, which can be in any aspect and is conjugated for gender and number. Since Serbo-Croatian has a developed aspect system this tense is considered redundant.

Kad budem pojeo... ("When I will have eaten...")
Nakon što budeš gotov... ("After you will have been done...")

An exception to the rule is found in the Kajkavian dialect, in which future perfect is also used instead of the nonexistent future tense. The auxiliary verb biti is pronounced differently in Kajkavian but similarly to Slovene.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Comrie, Bernard. 1985. Tense. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, p. 73.
  2. ^ Comly, John. 1811. A new spelling book, adapted to the different classes of pupils. Philadelphia: Kimber and Conrad.
  3. ^ Murray, Lindley. 1827. An abridgment of L. Murray's English grammar. Boston: James Loring.
  4. ^ H. W. Smyth, A Greek Grammar for Colleges, §§ 580–84, 659.

future, perfect, other, uses, disambiguation, contents, english, spanish, portuguese, french, german, dutch, afrikaans, catalan, greek, latin, italian, romanian, serbian, also, references, future, perfect, verb, form, construction, used, describe, event, that,. For other uses see Future perfect disambiguation Contents 1 English 2 Spanish 3 Portuguese 4 French 5 German 6 Dutch 7 Afrikaans 8 Catalan 9 Greek 10 Latin 11 Italian 12 Romanian 13 Serbian 14 See also 15 References The future perfect is a verb form or construction used to describe an event that is expected or planned to happen before a time of reference in the future such as will have finished in the English sentence I will have finished by tomorrow It is a grammatical combination of the future tense or other marking of future time and the perfect a grammatical aspect that views an event as prior and completed English editIn English the future perfect construction consists of a future construction such as the auxiliary verb will or shall or the going to future and the perfect infinitive of the main verb which consists of the infinitive of the auxiliary verb have and the past participle of the main verb This parallels the construction of the normal future verb forms combining the same first components with the plain infinitive e g She will fall She is going to fall For example She will have fallen asleep by the time we get home I shall have gone by then Will you have finished when I get back The auxiliary is commonly contracted to ll in speech and often in writing and the first part of the perfect infinitive is commonly contracted to ve in speech see English auxiliaries and contractions The negative form is made with will not or shall not these have their own contractions won t and shan t Some examples I ll have made the dinner by 6 PM He won t have done or will not have done it by this evening Won t you have finished by Thursday or Will you not have finished by Thursday Most commonly the future perfect is used with a time marker that indicates by when i e prior to what point in time the event is to occur as in the previous examples However it is also possible for it to be accompanied by a marker of the retrospective time of occurrence as in I will have done it on the previous Tuesday This is in contrast to the present perfect which is not normally used with a marker of past time one would not say I have done it last Tuesday since the inclusion of the past time marker last Tuesday would entail the use of the simple past rather than the present perfect The English future perfect places the action relative only to the absolute future reference point without specifying the location in time relative to the present In most cases the action will be in the future relative to the present but this is not necessarily the case for example If it rains tomorrow we will have worked in vain yesterday 1 The future perfect construction with will like other constructions with that auxiliary is sometimes used to refer to a confidently assumed present situation rather than a future situation as in He will have woken up by now The time of perspective of the English future perfect can be shifted from the present to the past by replacing will with its past tense form would thus effectively creating a past of the future of the past construction in which the indicated event or situation occurs before a time that occurs after the past time of perspective In 1982 I knew that by 1986 I would have already gone to prison This construction is identical to the English conditional perfect construction An obsolete term found in old grammars for the English future perfect is the second future tense 2 3 For more information see the sections on the future perfect and future perfect progressive in the article on uses of English verb forms Spanish editIn Spanish the future perfect is formed as this yosubjectI habrefuture of haberwill have habladopast participlespokenyo habre habladosubject future of haber past participle I will have spoken The future of haber is formed by the future stem habr the endings e as a emos eis an 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 such as these abrir abierto cubrir cubierto decir dicho escribir escrito freir frito hacer hecho morir muerto poner puesto ver visto volver vueltoVerbs 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 no is simply added before the form of haber yo no habre hablado For use with reflexive verbs the reflexive pronoun is before the form of haber from banarse to take a bath yo me habre banado negative yo no me habre banado Portuguese editIn Portuguese the future perfect is formed like in to Spanish subject future of ter or haver past participleeu haverei falado I will have spoken eu terei falado I will have spoken The future of ter is formed by the future stem ter the endings ei as a emos eis ao the 2nd person plural form tereis is however archaic The past participle of a verb is formed in turn by adding the endings ado and ido to the stems of ar and er ir verbs respectively However there are a few irregular participles such as these abrir aberto cobrir coberto dizer dito escrever escrito fazer feito ganhar ganho gastar gasto pagar pago por posto ver visto vir vindoSeveral verbs that are derived from the irregular verbs above form their past participle similarly like the past participle of predizer to predict is predito for supor to suppose it would be suposto and satisfazer to satisfy which is derived from fazer to do has the past participle satisfeito To make the sentence negative nao is simply added before the conjugated form of ter eu nao terei falado When using the future perfect with oblique pronouns European Portuguese and formal written Brazilian Portuguese use mesoclisis of the pronoun in the affirmative form and place the pronoun before the auxiliary verb in the negative form Eu te lo ei visto I will have seen him Eu nao o terei visto I will not have seen him Eles ter me ao visto They will have seen me Eles nao me terao visto They will not have seen me Informal Brazilian Portuguese usually places stressed pronouns such as me te se nos and lhe lhes between the conjugated form of ter and the past participle eles terao me visto in the negative form both eles nao terao me visto and eles nao me terao visto are possible but the latter is more formal and preferred in the written language Unstressed pronouns like o and a are normally placed before the conjugated form of ter eu o terei visto eu nao o terei visto French editThe French future perfect called futur anterieur is formed like in Spanish j subjectI auraifuture of avoir or etrewill have parlepast participlespokenj aurai parlesubject future of avoir or etre past participle I will have spoken However verbs that use etre in the past House of Etre verbs reflexive verbs use etre to form the present perfect For example je serai venu e uses the future of etre because of the action verb venir to come which uses etre in the past To form the future form of the auxiliary verbs the future stem is used and the endings ai as a ons ez ont are added Both avoir and etre have irregular future stems but with the exception of re verbs most verbs use the infinitive as the future stem je parler ai I will speak the future stem of avoir is aur and the future stem of etre is ser To form the past participle in French one usually adds e i and u to the roots of er ir and re verbs respectively However there are many exceptions to this rule including these commonly used ones and all of their related verbs faire fait mettre mis ouvrir ouvert prendre pris venir venuVerbs related to mettre to put promettre to promise to ouvrir offrir to offer souffrir to suffer to prendre to take apprendre to learn comprendre to understand to venir to come revenir to come again devenir to become When using etre as the auxiliary verb one must make sure that the past participle agrees with the subject je serai venu I masc will have come je serai venue I fem will have come nous serons venus We masc or mixed will have come nous serons venues We fem will have come Verbs using avoir do not need agreement To make this form negative one simply adds ne n if before a vowel before the auxiliary verb and pas after it je n aurai pas parle je ne serai pas venu For reflexive verbs one puts the reflexive pronoun before the auxiliary verb from se baigner to take a bath je me serai baigne negative je ne me serai pas baigne German editThe future perfect in German called Futur II Vorzukunft or vollendete Zukunft is formed like it is in English by taking the simple future of the past infinitive For that the simple future of the auxiliary sein ich werde sein du wirst sein etc or haben ich werde haben du wirst haben etc is used to enclose the past participle of the relevant verb ich werde gemacht haben du wirst gemacht haben etc Ich werde etwas geschrieben haben I will have written something Morgen um diese Uhrzeit werden wir bereits die Mathe Prufung gehabt haben Tomorrow at the same time we already will have had the math exam Es wird ihm gelungen sein He will have succeeded Wir werden angekommen sein We will have arrived dd dd Dutch editThe Dutch future perfect tense is very similar to the German future perfect tense It is formed by using the verb zullen shall and then placing the past participle and hebben to have or zijn to be after it Ik zal iets geschreven hebben I shall something written have I will have written something dd Afrikaans editThe Afrikaans future perfect tense is very similar to the Dutch future perfect tense It is formed by using the verb sal shall followed by the past participle and het conjugated form of the verb he Ek sal iets geskryf het I shall something written have I will have written something dd Unlike in Dutch almost all past participles in Afrikaans are regular with a few exceptions like gehad and gedag The Dutch strong participles are however sometimes preserved in Afrikaans when the participles are used as adjectives Dutch Ik zal een brief geschreven hebben Afrikaans Ek sal n brief geskryf het English I will have written a letter dd Dutch een geschreven brief Afrikaans n Geskrewe brief English a written letter dd Catalan editIn Catalan the future perfect is formed as this josubjectI haurefuture of haverwill have parlatpast participlespokenjo haure parlatsubject future of haver past participle I will have spoken The future of haver is formed by the future stem haver the endings e as a em eu an The past participle of a verb is formed by adding the endings at ut and it to ar er ir verbs respectively However there are a few irregular participles such as these caldre calgut correr corregut creure cregut dir dit dur dut empenyer empes entendre entes escriure escrit fer fet fondre fos haver hagut imprimir impres morir mort obrir obert prendre pres resoldre resolt riure rigut treure tret valer valgut venir vingut viure viscutTo make the tense negative no is simply added before the form of haver jo no haure parlat For use with reflexive verbs the reflexive pronoun is before the form of haver from banyar se to take a bath jo m haure banyat negative jo no m haure banyat Greek editIn Modern Greek the future perfect is formed with the future particle 8a tha an auxiliary verb exw or eimai echo ime to have or to be and the infinitive or participle I will have finished by then 8a exw teleiwsei have infinitive Tha echo teliosi I will be hired by then 8a eimai proslhf8eis be participle Tha ime proslipthisIn Ancient Greek the future perfect of the active voice is most commonly formed periphrastically by combining the future tense of the verb to be with the perfect active participle for example lelykὼs ἔsomai I shall have loosed In the middle and passive voice the periphrastic construction is also very common but a synthetic construction is found as well by adding the endings of the future tense to the perfect stem for example lelysomai I shall have been loosed The synthetic construction is rare and found only with a few verbs 4 Latin editIn Latin conjugation the active future perfect is formed by suffixing the future forms of esse to be to the perfect stem of the verb An exception is the active indicative third person plural where the suffix is erint instead of the expected erunt E g amaverint not amaverunt The passive future perfect is formed using the passive perfect participle and the future of esse Note that the participle is inflected like a normal adjective i e it agrees grammatically with the subject amare to love active future perfect passive future perfectSg 1st amaverō amatus a um erōSg 2nd amaveris amatus a um erisSg 3rd amaverit amatus a um eritPl 1st amaverimus amati ae a erimusPl 2nd amaveritis amati ae a eritisPl 3rd amaverint amati ae a eruntItalian editThe future perfect is used to say that something will happen in the future but before the time of the main sentence It is called futuro anteriore and is formed by using the appropriate auxiliary verb to be essere or to have avere in the future simple tense followed by the past participle Io avro mangiato I will have eaten Io saro andato a I will have gone It is also used for to express doubt about the past like the English use of must have Carlo e sua moglie non si parlano piu avranno litigato Carlo and his wife are no longer talking they must have quarrelled To translate By the time When I have done this you will have done that Italian uses the double future Quando io avro fatto questo tu avrai fatto quello Romanian editThe Romanian viitor anterior is used to refer to an action that will happen and finish before another future action It is formed by the future simple tense of a fi to be followed by the participle of the verb Eu voi fi ajuns acasă deja la ora 11 I will have arrived home already at 11 o clock Serbian editIt is usually restricted to conditional clauses It is formed from a conjugated form of auxiliary verb biti to be in the imperfective aspect plus past participle which can be in any aspect and is conjugated for gender and number Since Serbo Croatian has a developed aspect system this tense is considered redundant Kad budem pojeo When I will have eaten Nakon sto budes gotov After you will have been done An exception to the rule is found in the Kajkavian dialect in which future perfect is also used instead of the nonexistent future tense The auxiliary verb biti is pronounced differently in Kajkavian but similarly to Slovene See also editGrammatical aspect Grammatical tense Perfect grammar Present perfect PluperfectReferences edit Comrie Bernard 1985 Tense Cambridge Cambridge Univ Press p 73 Comly John 1811 A new spelling book adapted to the different classes of pupils Philadelphia Kimber and Conrad Murray Lindley 1827 An abridgment of L Murray s English grammar Boston James Loring H W Smyth A Greek Grammar for Colleges 580 84 659 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Future perfect amp oldid 1192236776, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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