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Wikipedia

Future tense

In grammar, a future tense (abbreviated FUT) is a verb form that generally marks the event described by the verb as not having happened yet, but expected to happen in the future. An example of a future tense form is the French aimera, meaning "will love", derived from the verb aimer ("love"). The "future" expressed by the future tense usually means the future relative to the moment of speaking, although in contexts where relative tense is used it may mean the future relative to some other point in time under consideration.

English does not have an inflectional future tense, though it has a variety of grammatical and lexical means for expressing future-related meanings. These include modal auxiliaries such as will and shall as well as the futurate present tense.[1]

Expressions

The nature of the future, necessarily uncertain and at varying distances ahead, means that the speaker may refer to future events with the modality either of probability (what the speaker expects to happen) or intent (what the speaker plans to make happen).[2] Whether future expression is realis or irrealis depends not so much on an objective ontological notion of future reality, but rather on the degree of the speaker's conviction that the event will in fact come about.[3]: p.20 

In many languages there is no grammatical (morphological or syntactic) indication of future tense. Future meaning is supplied by the context, with the use of temporal adverbs such as "later", "next year", etc. Such adverbs (in particular words meaning "tomorrow" and "then") sometimes develop into grammaticalized future tense markers. (A tense used to refer specifically to occurrences taking place on the following day is called a crastinal tense.)

In other languages, mostly of European origin, specific markers indicate futurity. These structures constitute a future tense. In many cases, an auxiliary verb is used, as in English, where futurity is often indicated by the modal auxiliary will (or shall). However, some languages combine such an auxiliary with the main verb to produce a simple (one-word, morphological) future tense. This is the origin of the future tense in Western Romance languages such as French and Italian (see below).

A given language may have more than one way to express futurity. English, for example, often refers to future events using present tense forms or other structures such as the going-to future, besides the canonical form with will/shall. In addition, the verb forms used for the future tense can also be used to express other types of meaning; English again provides examples of this (see English modal verbs for the various meanings that both will and shall can have besides simply expressing futurity).

Germanic languages

In Germanic languages, including English, a common expression of the future is using the present tense, with the futurity expressed using words that imply future action (I go to Berlin tomorrow or I am going to Berlin tomorrow). There is no simple (morphological) future tense as such. However, the future can also be expressed by employing an auxiliary construction that combines certain present tense auxiliary verbs with the simple infinitive (stem) of the main verb. These auxiliary forms vary between the languages. Other, generally more informal, expressions of futurity use an auxiliary with the compound infinitive of the main verb (as with the English is going to ...).

English

English grammar provides a number of ways to indicate the future nature of an occurrence. Some argue that English, like most Germanic languages, does not have a future tense[4]—that is, a grammatical form that always indicates futurity—nor does it have a mandatory form for the expression of futurity. However, through gradual development from its Germanic roots, English became what is now considered a language strongly future-tense-marking.[5] Currently, there are several generally accepted ways to indicate futurity in English, and some of them—particularly those that use will or shall as the most universal and widely used—are frequently described as future tense while some may argue these verbs serve both as present modal verbs and future tense markers.[4]

The will/shall future consists of the modal verb will or shall together with the bare infinitive of the main verb, as in "He will win easily" or "I shall do it when time permits". (Prescriptive grammarians prefer will in the second and third persons and shall in the first person, reversing the forms to express obligation or determination, but in practice shall and will are generally used interchangeably,[6] with will being more common. For details see shall and will.) The meaning of this construction is close to that expressed by the future tense in other languages. However the same construction with will or shall can have other meanings that do not indicate futurity, or else indicate some modality in addition to futurity (as in "He will make rude remarks", meaning he has a habit of doing so, or, "You shall act on my behalf", giving an order). For details of these meanings, see the sections on will and shall in the article on English modal verbs.

The form of the will/shall future described above is frequently called the simple future (or future simple). Other constructions provide additional auxiliaries that express particular aspects: the future progressive (or future continuous) as in "He will be working"; the future perfect as in "They will have finished"; and the future perfect progressive as in "You will have been practising." For detail on these, see the relevant sections of Uses of English verb forms. (For more on expressions of relative tense, such as the future perfect, see also the section above.)

Several other English constructions commonly refer to the future:

  • Present tense forms, as in "The train leaves at five," or, "My cousins arrive tomorrow." Since these grammatical forms are used more canonically to refer to present situations, they are not generally described as future tense; in sentences like those just given they may be described as "present tense with future meaning". Use of the present tense (rather than forms with will) is mandatory in some subordinate clauses referring to the future, such as "If I feel better next week, ..." and "As soon as they arrive, ...". For more details see the sections on the simple present, present progressive and dependent clauses in the article on English verb forms.
  • The going-to future, e.g., "John is going to leave tonight."
  • The construction with a finite form of the copula verb be together with the to-infinitive, e.g., "John is to leave tonight". (With the zero copula of newspaper headline style, this becomes simply "John to leave tonight".) For details see am to.
  • The construction with to be about to, e.g., "John is about to leave", referring to the expected immediate future. (A number of lexical expressions with similar meaning also exist, such as to be on the point of (doing something).)
  • Use of modal verbs with future meaning, to combine the expression of future time with certain modality: "I must do this" (also mun in Northern English dialect); "We should help him"; "I can get out of here"; "We may win"; "You might succeed". The same modal verbs are also often used with present rather than future reference. For details of their meanings and usage, see English modal verbs.

Questions and negatives are formed from all of the above constructions in the regular manner: see Questions and Negation in the English grammar article. The auxiliaries will and shall form the contracted negations won't and shan't (they can also sometimes be contracted when not negated, to 'll, such as in I'll find it).

The various ways of expressing the future carry different meanings, implying not just futurity but also aspect (the way an action or state takes place in time) and/or modality (the attitude of the speaker toward the action or state).[3][7] The precise interpretation must be based on the context. In particular there is sometimes a distinction in usage between the will/shall future and the going-to future (although in some contexts they are interchangeable). For more information see the going-to future article.

Dutch

Dutch can express the future in three ways:[8]

  • gaan + infinitive: Ik ga het boek lezen (I'm going to read the book). "Gaan" is a cognate of "to go".
  • zullen + infinitive: Ik zal het boek lezen (I will/shall read the book). "Zullen" is a cognate of "shall".
  • present tense + context or a temporal adverb or clause: Hoe lang blijft hij in Nederland? (How long is he staying in the Netherlands?) Its English-language equivalent uses the continuous or imperfective aspect.

Zullen + infinitive is more similar to shall than to will. It is used to:[9]

  • express a promise or a proposal
  • emphasize that something will certainly happen
  • express that an event is likely going to take place (by explicitly mentioning the probability)

English will and Dutch wil, although cognates, have over the centuries shifted in meaning, such that will is almost identical to shall, whereas Dutch wil means want, as in Ik wil het doen (I want to do it).

Gaan + infinitive can be compared with the English "going to" . It is used:

  • to express an intended action (but not a promise, proposal, or solemn plan)
  • to say that an event is going to take place (without emphasizing the certainty or mentioning the probability)

Swedish

Swedish[2]: pp.107–108  skall strongly implies intention, but with an adverb such as nog "probably" it can avoid the implication of intentionality: Det här skall nog gå bra "This will probably go well". However, the past tense of skall, skulle, can be used without such an adverb to express predictions in the past: Pelle sa, att det skulle bli varmt på eftermiddagen "Pelle said that it would be warm in the afternoon."

Pure future, regardless of intention, is usually expressed with kommer att (literally: "comes to"): Det här kommer att gå bra "This will go well", Du kommer att överleva det här "You will survive this".

Generally, future tense is sparsely used in spoken Swedish, with the verb instead being put in present tense and accompanied by a distinct time specification: Jag åker till Spanien på fredag "I travel to Spain on Friday" Då ses vi imorgon. "Then we meet tomorrow"

Latin and Romance

The future tense forms in Latin varied by conjugation. Here is a sample of the future tense for the first conjugation verb amare, "to love".

amabo I shall love
amabis you (singular) will love
amabit he, she, it will love
amabimus we shall love
amabitis you (plural) will love
amabunt they will love

See Latin conjugation for further details. Sound changes in Vulgar Latin made future forms difficult to distinguish from other verb forms (e.g., amabit "he will love" vs. amavit "he loved"), and the Latin simple future forms were gradually replaced by periphrastic structures involving the infinitive and an auxiliary verb, such as debere, venire, velle, or especially habere. All of the modern Romance languages have grammaticalized one of these periphrastic constructions for expressing the future tense; none of them has preserved the original Latin future, with the exception of Old French preserving the original Latin future forms of estre "to be": jo (i)er, tu (i)ers, il (i)ert, nos (i)ermes, vos *(i)ertes, and il (i)erent, all of them were derived from erō, irregular future form of esse "to be", in addition to future forms in ser- (< sedēre "to sit") or estr-.

Future tense with habere

While Classical Latin used a set of suffixes to the main verb for the future tense, later Vulgar Latin adopted the use of habere ("to have") with the infinitive, as for example:

petant aut non petant venire habet[10] ("whether they ask or do not ask, it will come")

From this construction, the major Western Romance languages have simple future tense forms that derive from the infinitive followed by a conjugated form of the verb "to have" (Latin habere). As the auxiliary verb lost its modal force (from a verb expressing obligation, desire, or intention, to a simple marker of tense), it also lost syntactic autonomy (becoming an enclitic) and phonological substance (e.g., Latin first singular habeo > ayyo > Old French ai, Modern French [e]).

Thus the sequence of Latin verbs amare habeo ("I have to love") gave rise to French aimerai, Spanish amaré, etc. "I will love".[11][12]

French
Personal pronoun Root verb Conjugation of avoir Future tense
je aimer ai aimerai
tu as aimeras
il/elle/on a aimera
nous avons aimerons
vous avez aimerez
ils/elles ont aimeront
Occitan
Personal pronoun Root verb Conjugation of aver Future tense
ieu aimar ai aimarai
tu as aimaràs
el/ela/òm a aimarà
nos avèm aimarem
vos avètz aimaretz
eles/elas an aimaràn
Portuguese
Personal pronoun Root verb Conjugation of haver Future tense
eu comer hei comerei
tu hás comerás
ele/ela/você comerá
nós hemos comeremos
vós heis comereis
eles/elas/vocês hão comerão
Spanish
Personal pronoun Root verb Conjugation of haber Future tense
yo comprar he compraré
has comprarás
él/ella/usted ha comprará
nosotros hemos/habemos compraremos
vosotros habéis compraréis
ellos/ellas/ustedes han comprarán

Phonetic changes also affected the infinitive in the evolution of this form, so that in the modern languages the future stem is not always identical to the infinitive. Consider the following Spanish examples:

  • "go out": infinitive salir → 1st. sing. future saldré in lieu of *saliré
  • "know": infinitive saber → 2nd. sing future "sabrás" in lieu of *saberás
  • "do": infinitive hacer → 3rd sing. future hará in lieu of *hacerá
  • "want": infinitive querer → 3rd pl. future querrán in lieu of *quererán

Indo-Aryan languages

Hindi

In Hindi, verbs can be conjugated for three grammatical aspects (habitual, perfective, and progressive) and five grammatical moods (indicative, presumptive, subjunctive, contrafactual, and imperative). Out of the three aspects, the habitual mood of Hindi cannot be conjugated into the future tense. The indicative future is constructed from the subjunctive future forms. Imperatives in Hindi can also be put into future tense.[13]

Indicative and Subjunctive future

There are two future subjunctive moods in modern Hindi, first the regular subjunctive and the second, the perfective subjunctive which superficially has the same form as the perfective aspect forms of verbs but still expresses future events, it is used with if clauses and relative clauses. In a semantic analysis, this use of the perfective aspect marker would not be considered perfective, since it is more closely related to subjunctive usage. Only the superficial form is identical to that of the perfective.[14] This perfective subjunctive cannot be used as a coupla for aspectual participles.

The future indicative forms are constructed using the future subjunctive forms of verbs by adding the future suffix गा (-) which declines for number and gender of the grammatical person. The table below shows the future subjunctive and indicative forms of the verb करना karnā (to do).

Future Inflection
gender singular plural

-गा

-gā

-गा

-gā

-गे

-gē

-गे

-gē

-गी

-गी

-gī

personal
pronouns
future
subjunctive
future
indicative
subjunctive
perfective
person plurality formality pronoun
1st singular

मैं

ma͠i

मैं

ma͠i

करूँ

karū̃

करूँ

karū̃

करूँगा

karū̃gā

करूँगा

karū̃gā

करूँगी

karū̃gī

करूँगी

karū̃gī

किया

kiyā

किया

kiyā

की

की

plural[a]

हम

ham

हम

ham

करें

karē̃

करें

karē̃

करेंगे

karē̃gē

करेंगे

karē̃gē

करेंगी

karē̃gī

करेंगी

karē̃gī

किये

kiyē

किये

kiyē

कीं

kī̃

कीं

kī̃

2nd singular intimate[b]

तू

तू

करे

karē

करे

karē

करेगा

karēgā

करेगा

karēgā

करेगी

karēgī

करेगी

karēgī

किया

kiyā

किया

kiyā

की

की

plural[c] familiar

तुम

tum

तुम

tum

करो

karo

करो

karo

करोगे

karogē

करोगे

karogē

करोगी

karogī

करोगी

karogī

किये

kiyē

किये

kiyē

की

की

formal[b]

आप

āp

आप

āp

करें

karē̃

करें

karē̃

करेंगे

karē̃gē

करेंगे

karē̃gē

करेंगी

karē̃gī

करेंगी

karē̃gī

किये

kiyē

किये

kiyē

कीं

kī̃

कीं

kī̃

translation (only 2nd person) (that) you do. you will do. (if) you do.
demonstrative
pronouns[d]
future
subjunctive
future
indicative
subjunctive
perfective
plurality usage proximal distal
singular literary

यह

yah

यह

yah

वह

vah

वह

vah

करे

karē

करे

karē

करेगा

karēgā

करेगा

karēgā

करेगी

karēgī

करेगी

karēgī

किया

kiyā

किया

kiyā

की

की

colloquial

ये

ye

ये

ye

वो

vo

वो

vo

singular
plural

करें

karē̃

करें

karē̃

करेंगे

karē̃gē

करेंगे

karē̃gē

करेंगी

karē̃gī

करेंगी

karē̃gī

किये

kiyē

किये

kiyē

कीं

kī̃

कीं

kī̃

plural literary

ये

ye

ये

ye

वे

ve

वे

ve

translation (only 3rd person fem.) (that) she do. she will do. (if) she does.
  1. ^ The 1st person plural pronoun हम (ham) is used as both the 1st person singular and 1st person plural pronoun in the eastern Hindi dialects.
  2. ^ a b The conjugations of the 2nd person intimate तू (tū) and formal आप (āp) pronouns are the same as the singular and plural demonstrative pronouns conjugations, respectively.
  3. ^ The pronouns तुम (tum) and आप (āp) are grammatically plural pronouns however, they are also used as singular pronouns, akin to the English pronoun "you".
  4. ^ Hindi doesn't have pronouns in the third person and the demonstrative pronouns double as the third person pronouns when they not have a noun argument.

Prospective future

The prospective future is constructed using the prospective future participle which is constructed from the oblique infinitive by adding the suffix वाला (-vālā) which also declines for the number and the gender of the pronoun. The participle is always followed by the auxiliary verb होना (honā) in its conjugated forms. The copula होना (honā) can be put into four grammatical moods: indicative, presumptive, subjunctive, and contrafactual.[15] The table below shows the indicative mood forms of the prospective future for the verb करना karnā (to do).

Prospective Future Inflection
gender singular plural

-नेवला

-nēvālā

-नेवला

-nēvālā

-नेवाले

-nēvālē

-नेवाले

-nēvālē

-नेवाली

-nēvālī

-नेवाली

-nēvālī

personal

pronouns

indicative mood
present imperfect past future
person plurality formality pronoun
1st singular

मैं

ma͠i

मैं

ma͠i

करनेवाला

karnēvālā

हूँ

hū̃

करनेवाला हूँ

karnēvālā hū̃

करनेवाली

karnēvālī

हूँ

hū̃

करनेवाली हूँ

karnēvālī hū̃

करनेवाला

karnēvālā

था

thā

करनेवाला था

karnēvālā thā

करनेवाली

karnēvālī

थी

thī

करनेवाली थी

karnēvālī thī

करनेवाला

karnēvālā

रहूँगा

rahū̃gā

करनेवाला रहूँगा

karnēvālā rahū̃gā

करनेवाली

karnēvālī

रहूँगी

rahū̃gī

करनेवाली रहूँगी

karnēvālī rahū̃gī

plural

हम

ham

हम

ham

करनेवाले

karnēvālē

हैं

ha͠i

करनेवाले हैं

karnēvālē ha͠i

करनेवाली

karnēvālī

हैं

ha͠i

करनेवाली हैं

karnēvālī ha͠i

करनेवाले

karnēvālē

थे

thē

करनेवाले थे

karnēvālē thē

करनेवाली

karnēvālī

थीं

thī̃

करनेवाली थीं

karnēvālī thī̃

करनेवाले

karnēvālē

रहेंगे

rahẽge

करनेवाले रहेंगे

karnēvālē rahẽge

करनेवाली

karnevālī

रहेंगी

rahẽgī

करनेवाली रहेंगी

karnevālī rahẽgī

2nd singular intimate

तू

तू

करनेवाला

karnēvālā

है

hai

करनेवाला है

karnēvālā hai

करनेवाली

karnēvālī

है

hai

करनेवाली है

karnēvālī hai

करनेवाला

karnēvālā

था

thā

करनेवाला था

karnēvālā thā

करनेवाली

karēvālī

थी

thī

करनेवाली थी

karēvālī thī

करनेवाला

karnēvālā

रहेगा

rahegā

करनेवाला रहेगा

karnēvālā rahegā

करनेवाली

karnēvālī

रहेगी

rahegī

करनेवाली रहेगी

karnēvālī rahegī

plural familiar

तुम

tum

तुम

tum

करनेवाले

karnēvālē

हो

ho

करनेवाले हो

karnēvālē ho

करनेवाली

karnēvālī

हो

ho

करनेवाली हो

karnēvālī ho

करनेवाले

karnēvālē

थे

thē

करनेवाले थे

karnēvālē thē

करनेवाली

karnēvālī

थी

thī

करनेवाली थी

karnēvālī thī

करनेवाले

karnēvālē

रहोगे

rahogē

करनेवाले रहोगे

karnēvālē rahogē

करनेवाली

karnēvālī

रहोगी

rahogī

करनेवाली रहोगी

karnēvālī rahogī

formal

आप

āp

आप

āp

करनेवाले

karnēvālē

हैं

ha͠i

करनेवाले हैं

karnēvālē ha͠i

करनेवाली

karnēvālī

हैं

ha͠i

करनेवाली हैं

karnēvālī ha͠i

करनेवाले

karnēvālē

थे

thē

करनेवाले थे

karnēvālē thē

करनेवाली

karnēvālī

थीं

thī̃

करनेवाली थीं

karnēvālī thī̃

करनेवाले

karnēvālē

रहेंगे

rahẽge

करनेवाले रहेंगे

karnēvālē rahẽge

करनेवाली

karnevālī

रहेंगी

rahẽgī

करनेवाली रहेंगी

karnevālī rahẽgī

translation ...is going to do. ...was going to do. ...will be going to do.

Imperative future

Imperatives in Hindi can be conjugated into two tenses, present and future tense. The conjugations are mentioned in the table below for the verb करना karnā (to do). Hindi also has imperatives forms which are constructed form the subjunctive form of the verbs for the formal 2nd person pronoun आप (āp), and also third person pronouns to give indirect commands.[16][17]

pronouns imperative mood subjunctive mood
present future present future
2nd intimate

तू

तू

कर

kar

कर

kar

करियो

kariyo

करियो

kariyo

familiar

तुम

tum

तुम

tum

करो

karo

करो

karo

करना

kar

करना

kar

formal

आप

āp

आप

āp

करिये

kariyē

करिये

kariyē

करियेगा

kariyēgā

करियेगा

kariyēgā

करें

kar

करें

kar

translation do! do (later)! (please) do!

Semitic languages

Hebrew

Biblical Hebrew has a distinction between past and future tenses which is similar in form to those used in other Semitic languages such as Arabic and Aramaic. Gesenius refers to the past and future verb forms as Perfect and Imperfect,[18] respectively, separating completed action from uncompleted action. However, the usage of verbs in these forms does not always have the same temporal meaning as in Indo-European languages, mainly due to the common use of a construct of inverting the time reference with a prefix "Waw consecutive" (ו' ההיפוך). With this construct, the Perfect-consecutive refers to the future[19] and the Imperfect-consecutive refers to the past.

Usage of the imperfect to discuss future events is somewhat uncommon in Biblical Hebrew, as the Bible mainly discusses past events. It can be found in quoted speech, such as in the words of Moses (imperfect verbs stressed):

1 וַיַּעַן מֹשֶׁה, וַיֹּאמֶר, וְהֵן לֹא-יַאֲמִינוּ לִי, וְלֹא יִשְׁמְעוּ בְּקֹלִי: כִּי יֹאמְרוּ, לֹא-נִרְאָה אֵלֶיךָ יְהֹוָה

1 And Moses answered and said, But, behold, they will not believe me, nor hearken unto my voice: for they will say, The LORD hath not appeared unto thee.

— Exodus 4:1[20]

The Perfect-consecutive is commonly found in prophetic text, describing an unspecified future, as in the Book of Isaiah:

2 וְהָיָה בְּאַחֲרִית הַיָּמִים, נָכוֹן יִהְיֶה הַר בֵּית-יְהוָה בְּרֹאשׁ הֶהָרִים, וְנִשָּׂא, מִגְּבָעוֹת; וְנָהֲרוּ אֵלָיו, כָּל-הַגּוֹיִם.

2 In the last days the mountain of the Lord’s temple will be established as the highest of the mountains; it will be exalted above the hills, and all nations will stream to it.

— Isaiah 2:2[21]

Modern Hebrew always employs the imperfect as the future tense (and the perfect as the past tense). The usage of "Waw consecutive" has practically disappeared, except for quotes from the Bible and Poetic language.

Arabic

To form future tense in Arabic the prefix (سـ) "sa" is added to the present tense verb, or (سوف) "sawfa".[22]

For example, consider the sentence:

آكلُ تفاحاً

Akulu

eat.1SG

tuffahan

apples

Akulu tuffahan

eat.1SG apples

I eat apples

To express the future we have two ways:

In Classical Arabic the latter indicates an individual future action that usually takes place further in the future than the first mentioned form, which is usually used with verbs that relate to other actions, and mostly referring to rather near future actions. However, in Modern Standard Arabic (MSA) the distinction is minimal.

Moreover, the indication of the future tense in dialectal Arabic is quite varied from one dialect to the next. Generally speaking, the words meaning "want to" (بدي / أريد أن), "go to" (أروح), "intend to"(ناوي /نويت), and many others are used daily to indicate future actions.[23] In Moroccan Arabic, the word "Ghad" (غاد) is used to indicate future, which literally means "there" (or there is to happen), that is in some way similar to the English formation "there I go.."

Mandarin Chinese

Mandarin Chinese has no grammatical tense, instead indicating time of action from the context or using adverbs. However, the auxiliary verb 會 / - huì / ㄏㄨㄟˋ, a modal meaning "can", "know how", can alternatively indicate futurity.[24]: p.265,  [25]: p.183  For lexical futurity, the word yào, which can serve as a verb meaning "to want", can also serve as an adverb meaning "immediately":[25]: p. 175  For example, 我要洗澡 wǒ yào xǐzǎo can mean either "I want to bathe" or "I am about to bathe". 即 、將 jiāng serve a similar function as tense-marking adverbs.[how?]

Creoles

Creoles are languages with a vocabulary heavily based on a superstrate language but a grammar based on substrate languages and/or universal language tendencies. Some Creoles model a future tense/irrealis mood marker on "go" from the superstrate (analogous to English "am going to").[26]: p. 188  In many creoles the future can be indicated with the progressive aspect, analogous to the English "I'm seeing him tomorrow."[26]: p. 190  In general creoles tend to put less emphasis on marking tense than on marking aspect. When any of tense, aspect, and modality are specified, they are typically indicated with invariant pre-verbal markers in the sequence anterior relative tense (prior to the time focused on), irrealis mode (conditional or future), imperfective aspect.[26]: pp. 176–9, p. 191 

Jamaican English Creole

The future marker in Jamaican Creole is /de go/[26]: pp. 93–95  or /a go/: /de go hapm/ "is going to happen", /mi a go ɹon/ "I am going to run".

Belizean Creole English

In Belizean Creole, the future tense is indicated by a mandatory invariant pre-verbal particle /(w)a(n)/, /gwein/, or /gouɲ/.

Gullah

In Gullah the future is indicated by the pre-verbal marker gwine: Uh gwine he'p dem "I'm going to help them".

Hawaiian Creole English

In Hawaiian Creole, the pre-verbal future marker is gon:[27] Ai gon bai wan pikap "I'm going to buy a pickup".

Haitian Creole

Haitian Creole, based on a French superstrate, interchangeably uses pral or va (from French 3rd person singular va "goes") pre-verbally to indicate the future:[28] Mwen va fini lit. "I go finish"; Li pral vini jodi a "He will come today".

References

  1. ^ Huddleston, Rodney; Pullum, Geoffrey (2002). The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language. Cambridge University Press. pp. 131–136, 190, 208–210. ISBN 9780521431460.
  2. ^ a b Östen Dahl, Tense and Aspect Systems, Blackwell, 1985, pp. 105-106.
  3. ^ a b Fleischman, Suzanne, The Future in Thought and Language, Cambridge Univ. Press, 1982: pp. 18-19, 86-89, and 95-97.
  4. ^ a b Sarkar, Anoop (1998). "The Conflict Between Future Tense and Modality: The Case of Will in English". University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics. 5: 90–117 – via Repository.Penn.edu.
  5. ^ Harbeck, James. "Can language slow down time?". www.bbc.com. Retrieved 24 January 2022.
  6. ^ Usage notes on "shall" in New Oxford Dictionary of English, 1999 Oxford University Press
  7. ^ Comrie, Bernard, Tense, Cambridge Univ. Press, 1985: pp. 21, 47-48.
  8. ^ Stern, Henry R. (1 October 1984). Essential Dutch Grammar. Courier Corporation. ISBN 9780486246758. Retrieved 9 May 2018 – via Google Books.
  9. ^ "Dutch Grammar • Using the simple future". www.dutchgrammar.com. from the original on 22 September 2017. Retrieved 9 May 2018.
  10. ^ St Augustine of Hippo
  11. ^ The Importance of Lithuanian for Indo-European Linguistics - Antanas Klimas 2018-05-09 at the Wayback Machine See section 9.
  12. ^ Zink, Gaston (1997). Morphologie du français médiéval (in French) (4th ed.). Paris: PUF. ISBN 2-13-046470-X.
  13. ^ Shapiro, Michael C. (1989). A Primer of Modern Standard Hindi. New Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass. pp. 38–44 & 88–94. ISBN 81-208-0475-9.
  14. ^ VAN OLPHEN, HERMAN (1975). "Aspect, Tense, and Mood in the Hindi Verb". Indo-Iranian Journal. 16 (4): 296. doi:10.1163/000000075791615397. ISSN 0019-7246. JSTOR 24651488.
  15. ^ VAN OLPHEN, HERMAN (1975). "Aspect, Tense, and Mood in the Hindi Verb". Indo-Iranian Journal. 16 (4): 284–301. doi:10.1163/000000075791615397. ISSN 0019-7246. JSTOR 24651488.
  16. ^ "Future Imperatives - Hindi". A Door Into Hindi.
  17. ^ Snell, Rupert; Weightman, Simon (2016). Complete Hindi. Great Britain: John Murray Learning. pp. 52–62. ISBN 978-144410683-1.
  18. ^ Gesenius' Hebrew Grammar (1909) Archived 2017-08-13 at the Wayback Machine, Wilhelm Gesenius, §106
  19. ^ Gesenius' Hebrew Grammar (1909) Archived 2017-08-13 at the Wayback Machine, Wilhelm Gesenius, §112
  20. ^ Exodus 4:1, King James Version (Oxford Standard, 1769)
  21. ^ Isaiah 2:2, King James Version (Oxford Standard, 1769)
  22. ^ "future tense". wordreference.com. from the original on 3 February 2014. Retrieved 9 May 2018.
  23. ^ "All dialects: Future markers غاد ، باش ، ح ، راح". wordreference.com. from the original on 3 February 2014. Retrieved 9 May 2018.
  24. ^ Bybee, Joan, Revere Perkins, and William Pagliuca, The Evolution of Grammar, Univ. of Chicago Press, 1994.
  25. ^ a b Li, Charles N., and Sandra A. Thomson, Mandarin Chinese: A Functional Reference Grammar, 1989.
  26. ^ a b c d Holm, John, An Introduction to Pidgins and Creoles, Cambridge Univ. Press, 2000.
  27. ^ Sakoda, Kent, and Siegel, Jeff, Pidgin Grammar, Bess Press, 2003, p. 38.
  28. ^ Turnbull, Wally R., Creole Made Easy, Light Messages, 2000, p. 13.

External links

  • English Grammar Reference and Exercises

future, tense, other, uses, disambiguation, grammar, future, tense, abbreviated, verb, form, that, generally, marks, event, described, verb, having, happened, expected, happen, future, example, future, tense, form, french, aimera, meaning, will, love, derived,. For other uses see Future tense disambiguation In grammar a future tense abbreviated FUT is a verb form that generally marks the event described by the verb as not having happened yet but expected to happen in the future An example of a future tense form is the French aimera meaning will love derived from the verb aimer love The future expressed by the future tense usually means the future relative to the moment of speaking although in contexts where relative tense is used it may mean the future relative to some other point in time under consideration English does not have an inflectional future tense though it has a variety of grammatical and lexical means for expressing future related meanings These include modal auxiliaries such as will and shall as well as the futurate present tense 1 Contents 1 Expressions 2 Germanic languages 2 1 English 2 2 Dutch 2 3 Swedish 3 Latin and Romance 3 1 Future tense with habere 4 Indo Aryan languages 4 1 Hindi 4 1 1 Indicative and Subjunctive future 4 1 2 Prospective future 4 1 3 Imperative future 5 Semitic languages 5 1 Hebrew 5 2 Arabic 6 Mandarin Chinese 7 Creoles 7 1 Jamaican English Creole 7 2 Belizean Creole English 7 3 Gullah 7 4 Hawaiian Creole English 7 5 Haitian Creole 8 References 9 External linksExpressions EditThe nature of the future necessarily uncertain and at varying distances ahead means that the speaker may refer to future events with the modality either of probability what the speaker expects to happen or intent what the speaker plans to make happen 2 Whether future expression is realis or irrealis depends not so much on an objective ontological notion of future reality but rather on the degree of the speaker s conviction that the event will in fact come about 3 p 20 In many languages there is no grammatical morphological or syntactic indication of future tense Future meaning is supplied by the context with the use of temporal adverbs such as later next year etc Such adverbs in particular words meaning tomorrow and then sometimes develop into grammaticalized future tense markers A tense used to refer specifically to occurrences taking place on the following day is called a crastinal tense In other languages mostly of European origin specific markers indicate futurity These structures constitute a future tense In many cases an auxiliary verb is used as in English where futurity is often indicated by the modal auxiliary will or shall However some languages combine such an auxiliary with the main verb to produce a simple one word morphological future tense This is the origin of the future tense in Western Romance languages such as French and Italian see below A given language may have more than one way to express futurity English for example often refers to future events using present tense forms or other structures such as the going to future besides the canonical form with will shall In addition the verb forms used for the future tense can also be used to express other types of meaning English again provides examples of this see English modal verbs for the various meanings that both will and shall can have besides simply expressing futurity Germanic languages EditIn Germanic languages including English a common expression of the future is using the present tense with the futurity expressed using words that imply future action I go to BerlintomorroworI am going to Berlin tomorrow There is no simple morphological future tense as such However the future can also be expressed by employing an auxiliary construction that combines certain present tense auxiliary verbs with the simple infinitive stem of the main verb These auxiliary forms vary between the languages Other generally more informal expressions of futurity use an auxiliary with the compound infinitive of the main verb as with the English is going to English Edit English grammar provides a number of ways to indicate the future nature of an occurrence Some argue that English like most Germanic languages does not have a future tense 4 that is a grammatical form that always indicates futurity nor does it have a mandatory form for the expression of futurity However through gradual development from its Germanic roots English became what is now considered a language strongly future tense marking 5 Currently there are several generally accepted ways to indicate futurity in English and some of them particularly those that use will or shall as the most universal and widely used are frequently described as future tense while some may argue these verbs serve both as present modal verbs and future tense markers 4 The will shall future consists of the modal verb will or shall together with the bare infinitive of the main verb as in He will win easily or I shall do it when time permits Prescriptive grammarians prefer will in the second and third persons and shall in the first person reversing the forms to express obligation or determination but in practice shall and will are generally used interchangeably 6 with will being more common For details see shall and will The meaning of this construction is close to that expressed by the future tense in other languages However the same construction with will or shall can have other meanings that do not indicate futurity or else indicate some modality in addition to futurity as in He will make rude remarks meaning he has a habit of doing so or You shall act on my behalf giving an order For details of these meanings see the sections on will and shall in the article on English modal verbs The form of the will shall future described above is frequently called the simple future or future simple Other constructions provide additional auxiliaries that express particular aspects the future progressive or future continuous as in He will be working the future perfect as in They will have finished and the future perfect progressive as in You will have been practising For detail on these see the relevant sections of Uses of English verb forms For more on expressions of relative tense such as the future perfect see also the section above Several other English constructions commonly refer to the future Present tense forms as in The train leaves at five or My cousins arrive tomorrow Since these grammatical forms are used more canonically to refer to present situations they are not generally described as future tense in sentences like those just given they may be described as present tense with future meaning Use of the present tense rather than forms with will is mandatory in some subordinate clauses referring to the future such as If I feel better next week and As soon as they arrive For more details see the sections on the simple present present progressive and dependent clauses in the article on English verb forms The going to future e g John is going to leave tonight The construction with a finite form of the copula verb be together with the to infinitive e g John is to leave tonight With the zero copula of newspaper headline style this becomes simply John to leave tonight For details see am to The construction with to be about to e g John is about to leave referring to the expected immediate future A number of lexical expressions with similar meaning also exist such as to be on the point of doing something Use of modal verbs with future meaning to combine the expression of future time with certain modality I must do this also mun in Northern English dialect We should help him I can get out of here We may win You might succeed The same modal verbs are also often used with present rather than future reference For details of their meanings and usage see English modal verbs Questions and negatives are formed from all of the above constructions in the regular manner see Questions and Negation in the English grammar article The auxiliaries will and shall form the contracted negations won t and shan t they can also sometimes be contracted when not negated to ll such as in I ll find it The various ways of expressing the future carry different meanings implying not just futurity but also aspect the way an action or state takes place in time and or modality the attitude of the speaker toward the action or state 3 7 The precise interpretation must be based on the context In particular there is sometimes a distinction in usage between the will shall future and the going to future although in some contexts they are interchangeable For more information see the going to future article Dutch Edit Dutch can express the future in three ways 8 gaan infinitive Ik ga het boek lezen I m going to read the book Gaan is a cognate of to go zullen infinitive Ik zal het boek lezen I will shall read the book Zullen is a cognate of shall present tense context or a temporal adverb or clause Hoe lang blijft hij in Nederland How long is he staying in the Netherlands Its English language equivalent uses the continuous or imperfective aspect Zullen infinitive is more similar to shall than to will It is used to 9 express a promise or a proposal emphasize that something will certainly happen express that an event is likely going to take place by explicitly mentioning the probability English will and Dutch wil although cognates have over the centuries shifted in meaning such that will is almost identical to shall whereas Dutch wil means want as in Ik wil het doen I want to do it Gaan infinitive can be compared with the English going to It is used to express an intended action but not a promise proposal or solemn plan to say that an event is going to take place without emphasizing the certainty or mentioning the probability Swedish Edit Swedish 2 pp 107 108 skall strongly implies intention but with an adverb such as nog probably it can avoid the implication of intentionality Det har skall nog ga bra This will probably go well However the past tense of skall skulle can be used without such an adverb to express predictions in the past Pelle sa att det skulle bli varmt pa eftermiddagen Pelle said that it would be warm in the afternoon Pure future regardless of intention is usually expressed with kommer att literally comes to Det har kommer att ga bra This will go well Du kommer att overleva det har You will survive this Generally future tense is sparsely used in spoken Swedish with the verb instead being put in present tense and accompanied by a distinct time specification Jag aker till Spanien pa fredag I travel to Spain on Friday Da ses vi imorgon Then we meet tomorrow Latin and Romance EditThe future tense forms in Latin varied by conjugation Here is a sample of the future tense for the first conjugation verb amare to love amabo I shall loveamabis you singular will loveamabit he she it will loveamabimus we shall loveamabitis you plural will loveamabunt they will loveSee Latin conjugation for further details Sound changes in Vulgar Latin made future forms difficult to distinguish from other verb forms e g amabit he will love vs amavit he loved and the Latin simple future forms were gradually replaced by periphrastic structures involving the infinitive and an auxiliary verb such as debere venire velle or especially habere All of the modern Romance languages have grammaticalized one of these periphrastic constructions for expressing the future tense none of them has preserved the original Latin future with the exception of Old French preserving the original Latin future forms of estre to be jo i er tu i ers il i ert nos i ermes vos i ertes and il i erent all of them were derived from erō irregular future form of esse to be in addition to future forms in ser lt sedere to sit or estr Future tense with habere Edit While Classical Latin used a set of suffixes to the main verb for the future tense later Vulgar Latin adopted the use of habere to have with the infinitive as for example petant aut non petant venire habet 10 whether they ask or do not ask it will come From this construction the major Western Romance languages have simple future tense forms that derive from the infinitive followed by a conjugated form of the verb to have Latin habere As the auxiliary verb lost its modal force from a verb expressing obligation desire or intention to a simple marker of tense it also lost syntactic autonomy becoming an enclitic and phonological substance e g Latin first singular habeo gt ayyo gt Old French ai Modern French e Thus the sequence of Latin verbs amare habeo I have to love gave rise to French aimerai Spanish amare etc I will love 11 12 French Personal pronoun Root verb Conjugation of avoir Future tenseje aimer ai aimeraitu as aimerasil elle on a aimeranous avons aimeronsvous avez aimerezils elles ont aimerontOccitan Personal pronoun Root verb Conjugation of aver Future tenseieu aimar ai aimaraitu as aimarasel ela om a aimaranos avem aimaremvos avetz aimaretzeles elas an aimaranPortuguese Personal pronoun Root verb Conjugation of haver Future tenseeu comer hei comereitu has comerasele ela voce ha comeranos hemos comeremosvos heis comereiseles elas voces hao comeraoSpanish Personal pronoun Root verb Conjugation of haber Future tenseyo comprar he compraretu has comprarasel ella usted ha compraranosotros hemos habemos compraremosvosotros habeis comprareisellos ellas ustedes han compraranPhonetic changes also affected the infinitive in the evolution of this form so that in the modern languages the future stem is not always identical to the infinitive Consider the following Spanish examples go out infinitive salir 1st sing future saldre in lieu of salire know infinitive saber 2nd sing future sabras in lieu of saberas do infinitive hacer 3rd sing future hara in lieu of hacera want infinitive querer 3rd pl future querran in lieu of quereranIndo Aryan languages EditHindi Edit In Hindi verbs can be conjugated for three grammatical aspects habitual perfective and progressive and five grammatical moods indicative presumptive subjunctive contrafactual and imperative Out of the three aspects the habitual mood of Hindi cannot be conjugated into the future tense The indicative future is constructed from the subjunctive future forms Imperatives in Hindi can also be put into future tense 13 Indicative and Subjunctive future Edit There are two future subjunctive moods in modern Hindi first the regular subjunctive and the second the perfective subjunctive which superficially has the same form as the perfective aspect forms of verbs but still expresses future events it is used with if clauses and relative clauses In a semantic analysis this use of the perfective aspect marker would not be considered perfective since it is more closely related to subjunctive usage Only the superficial form is identical to that of the perfective 14 This perfective subjunctive cannot be used as a coupla for aspectual participles The future indicative forms are constructed using the future subjunctive forms of verbs by adding the future suffix ग ga which declines for number and gender of the grammatical person The table below shows the future subjunctive and indicative forms of the verb करन karna to do Future Inflection gender singular plural ग ga ग ga ग ge ग ge ग ग gipersonalpronouns futuresubjunctive futureindicative subjunctiveperfectiveperson plurality formality pronoun 1st singular म ma iम ma i कर karu कर karu कर ग karu gaकर ग karu ga कर ग karu giकर ग karu gi क य kiyaक य kiya क kiक kiplural a हमhamहमham कर kare कर kare कर ग kare geकर ग kare ge कर ग kare giकर ग kare gi क य kiyeक य kiye क ki क ki 2nd singular intimate b त tuत tu कर kareकर kare कर ग karegaकर ग karega कर ग karegiकर ग karegi क य kiyaक य kiya क kiक kiplural c familiar त मtumत मtum कर karoकर karo कर ग karogeकर ग karoge कर ग karogiकर ग karogi क य kiyeक य kiye क kiक kiformal b आपapआपap कर kare कर kare कर ग kare geकर ग kare ge कर ग kare giकर ग kare gi क य kiyeक य kiye क ki क ki translation only 2nd person that you do you will do if you do demonstrativepronouns d futuresubjunctive futureindicative subjunctiveperfectiveplurality usage proximal distal singular literary यहyahयहyah वहvahवहvah कर kareकर kare कर ग karegaकर ग karega कर ग karegiकर ग karegi क य kiyaक य kiya क kiक kicolloquial य yeय ye व voव vosingularplural कर kare कर kare कर ग kare geकर ग kare ge कर ग kare giकर ग kare gi क य kiyeक य kiye क ki क ki plural literary य yeय ye व veव vetranslation only 3rd person fem that she do she will do if she does The 1st person plural pronoun हम ham is used as both the 1st person singular and 1st person plural pronoun in the eastern Hindi dialects a b The conjugations of the 2nd person intimate त tu and formal आप ap pronouns are the same as the singular and plural demonstrative pronouns conjugations respectively The pronouns त म tum and आप ap are grammatically plural pronouns however they are also used as singular pronouns akin to the English pronoun you Hindi doesn t have pronouns in the third person and the demonstrative pronouns double as the third person pronouns when they not have a noun argument Prospective future Edit The prospective future is constructed using the prospective future participle which is constructed from the oblique infinitive by adding the suffix व ल vala which also declines for the number and the gender of the pronoun The participle is always followed by the auxiliary verb ह न hona in its conjugated forms The copula ह न hona can be put into four grammatical moods indicative presumptive subjunctive and contrafactual 15 The table below shows the indicative mood forms of the prospective future for the verb करन karna to do Prospective Future Inflection gender singular plural न वल nevala न वल nevala न व ल nevale न व ल nevale न व ल nevali न व ल nevalipersonal pronouns indicative moodpresent imperfect past futureperson plurality formality pronoun 1st singular म ma iम ma i करन व ल karnevalaह hu करन व ल ह karnevala hu करन व ल karnevaliह hu करन व ल ह karnevali hu करन व ल karnevalaथ thaकरन व ल थ karnevala tha करन व ल karnevaliथ thiकरन व ल थ karnevali thi करन व ल karnevalaरह ग rahu gaकरन व ल रह ग karnevala rahu ga करन व ल karnevaliरह ग rahu giकरन व ल रह ग karnevali rahu giplural हमhamहमham करन व ल karnevaleह ha iकरन व ल ह karnevale ha i करन व ल karnevaliह ha iकरन व ल ह karnevali ha i करन व ल karnevaleथ theकरन व ल थ karnevale the करन व ल karnevaliथ thi करन व ल थ karnevali thi करन व ल karnevaleरह ग rahẽgeकरन व ल रह ग karnevale rahẽge करन व ल karnevaliरह ग rahẽgiकरन व ल रह ग karnevali rahẽgi2nd singular intimate त tuत tu करन व ल karnevalaह haiकरन व ल ह karnevala hai करन व ल karnevaliह haiकरन व ल ह karnevali hai करन व ल karnevalaथ thaकरन व ल थ karnevala tha करन व ल karevaliथ thiकरन व ल थ karevali thi करन व ल karnevalaरह ग rahegaकरन व ल रह ग karnevala rahega करन व ल karnevaliरह ग rahegiकरन व ल रह ग karnevali rahegiplural familiar त मtumत मtum करन व ल karnevaleह hoकरन व ल ह karnevale ho करन व ल karnevaliह hoकरन व ल ह karnevali ho करन व ल karnevaleथ theकरन व ल थ karnevale the करन व ल karnevaliथ thiकरन व ल थ karnevali thi करन व ल karnevaleरह ग rahogeकरन व ल रह ग karnevale rahoge करन व ल karnevaliरह ग rahogiकरन व ल रह ग karnevali rahogiformal आपapआपap करन व ल karnevaleह ha iकरन व ल ह karnevale ha i करन व ल karnevaliह ha iकरन व ल ह karnevali ha i करन व ल karnevaleथ theकरन व ल थ karnevale the करन व ल karnevaliथ thi करन व ल थ karnevali thi करन व ल karnevaleरह ग rahẽgeकरन व ल रह ग karnevale rahẽge करन व ल karnevaliरह ग rahẽgiकरन व ल रह ग karnevali rahẽgitranslation is going to do was going to do will be going to do Imperative future Edit Imperatives in Hindi can be conjugated into two tenses present and future tense The conjugations are mentioned in the table below for the verb करन karna to do Hindi also has imperatives forms which are constructed form the subjunctive form of the verbs for the formal 2nd person pronoun आप ap and also third person pronouns to give indirect commands 16 17 pronouns imperative mood subjunctive moodpresent future present future2nd intimate त tuत tu करkarकरkar कर य kariyoकर य kariyo familiar त मtumत मtum कर karoकर karo करन karnaकरन karna formal आपapआपap कर य kariyeकर य kariye कर य ग kariyegaकर य ग kariyega कर karẽकर karẽtranslation do do later please do Semitic languages EditHebrew Edit Biblical Hebrew has a distinction between past and future tenses which is similar in form to those used in other Semitic languages such as Arabic and Aramaic Gesenius refers to the past and future verb forms as Perfect and Imperfect 18 respectively separating completed action from uncompleted action However the usage of verbs in these forms does not always have the same temporal meaning as in Indo European languages mainly due to the common use of a construct of inverting the time reference with a prefix Waw consecutive ו ההיפוך With this construct the Perfect consecutive refers to the future 19 and the Imperfect consecutive refers to the past Usage of the imperfect to discuss future events is somewhat uncommon in Biblical Hebrew as the Bible mainly discusses past events It can be found in quoted speech such as in the words of Moses imperfect verbs stressed 1ו י ע ן מ ש ה ו י אמ ר ו ה ן ל א י א מ ינו ל י ו ל א י ש מ עו ב ק ל י כ י י אמ רו ל א נ ר א ה א ל יך י ה ו ה 1And Moses answered and said But behold they will not believe me nor hearken unto my voice for they will say The LORD hath not appeared unto thee Exodus 4 1 20 The Perfect consecutive is commonly found in prophetic text describing an unspecified future as in the Book of Isaiah 2ו ה י ה ב א ח ר ית ה י מ ים נ כו ן י ה י ה ה ר ב ית י הו ה ב ר אש ה ה ר ים ו נ ש א מ ג ב עו ת ו נ ה רו א ל יו כ ל ה ג ו י ם 2 In the last days the mountain of the Lord s temple will be established as the highest of the mountains it will be exalted above the hills and all nations will stream to it Isaiah 2 2 21 Modern Hebrew always employs the imperfect as the future tense and the perfect as the past tense The usage of Waw consecutive has practically disappeared except for quotes from the Bible and Poetic language Arabic Edit To form future tense in Arabic the prefix سـ sa is added to the present tense verb or سوف sawfa 22 For example consider the sentence آكل تفاحا Akulueat 1SGtuffahanapplesAkulu tuffahaneat 1SG applesI eat apples To express the future we have two ways written as part of the verb سـآكل تفاحا SaakuluFUT eat 1SGtuffahanapplesSaakulu tuffahanFUT eat 1SG applesI will eat apples written as a Clitic to indicate the future but preceding the verb سوف آكل تفاحا SawfaFUTakulueat 1SGtuffahanapplesSawfa akulu tuffahanFUT eat 1SG applesI will eat apples In Classical Arabic the latter indicates an individual future action that usually takes place further in the future than the first mentioned form which is usually used with verbs that relate to other actions and mostly referring to rather near future actions However in Modern Standard Arabic MSA the distinction is minimal Moreover the indication of the future tense in dialectal Arabic is quite varied from one dialect to the next Generally speaking the words meaning want to بدي أريد أن go to أروح intend to ناوي نويت and many others are used daily to indicate future actions 23 In Moroccan Arabic the word Ghad غاد is used to indicate future which literally means there or there is to happen that is in some way similar to the English formation there I go Mandarin Chinese EditMandarin Chinese has no grammatical tense instead indicating time of action from the context or using adverbs However the auxiliary verb 會 会 hui ㄏㄨㄟˋ a modal meaning can know how can alternatively indicate futurity 24 p 265 25 p 183 For lexical futurity the word 要 yao which can serve as a verb meaning to want can also serve as an adverb meaning immediately 25 p 175 For example 我要洗澡 wǒ yao xǐzǎo can mean either I want to bathe or I am about to bathe 即 ji 將 jiang serve a similar function as tense marking adverbs how Creoles EditCreoles are languages with a vocabulary heavily based on a superstrate language but a grammar based on substrate languages and or universal language tendencies Some Creoles model a future tense irrealis mood marker on go from the superstrate analogous to English am going to 26 p 188 In many creoles the future can be indicated with the progressive aspect analogous to the English I m seeing him tomorrow 26 p 190 In general creoles tend to put less emphasis on marking tense than on marking aspect When any of tense aspect and modality are specified they are typically indicated with invariant pre verbal markers in the sequence anterior relative tense prior to the time focused on irrealis mode conditional or future imperfective aspect 26 pp 176 9 p 191 Jamaican English Creole Edit The future marker in Jamaican Creole is de go 26 pp 93 95 or a go de go hapm is going to happen mi a go ɹon I am going to run Belizean Creole English Edit In Belizean Creole the future tense is indicated by a mandatory invariant pre verbal particle w a n gwein or gouɲ Gullah Edit In Gullah the future is indicated by the pre verbal marker gwine Uh gwine he p dem I m going to help them Hawaiian Creole English Edit In Hawaiian Creole the pre verbal future marker is gon 27 Ai gon bai wan pikap I m going to buy a pickup Haitian Creole Edit Haitian Creole based on a French superstrate interchangeably uses pral or va from French 3rd person singular va goes pre verbally to indicate the future 28 Mwen va fini lit I go finish Li pral vini jodi a He will come today References Edit Huddleston Rodney Pullum Geoffrey 2002 The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language Cambridge University Press pp 131 136 190 208 210 ISBN 9780521431460 a b Osten Dahl Tense and Aspect Systems Blackwell 1985 pp 105 106 a b Fleischman Suzanne The Future in Thought and Language Cambridge Univ Press 1982 pp 18 19 86 89 and 95 97 a b Sarkar Anoop 1998 The Conflict Between Future Tense and Modality The Case of Will in English University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics 5 90 117 via Repository Penn edu Harbeck James Can language slow down time www bbc com Retrieved 24 January 2022 Usage notes on shall in New Oxford Dictionary of English 1999 Oxford University Press Comrie Bernard Tense Cambridge Univ Press 1985 pp 21 47 48 Stern Henry R 1 October 1984 Essential Dutch Grammar Courier Corporation ISBN 9780486246758 Retrieved 9 May 2018 via Google Books Dutch Grammar Using the simple future www dutchgrammar com Archived from the original on 22 September 2017 Retrieved 9 May 2018 St Augustine of Hippo The Importance of Lithuanian for Indo European Linguistics Antanas Klimas Archived 2018 05 09 at the Wayback Machine See section 9 Zink Gaston 1997 Morphologie du francais medieval in French 4th ed Paris PUF ISBN 2 13 046470 X Shapiro Michael C 1989 A Primer of Modern Standard Hindi New Delhi Motilal Banarsidass pp 38 44 amp 88 94 ISBN 81 208 0475 9 VAN OLPHEN HERMAN 1975 Aspect Tense and Mood in the Hindi Verb Indo Iranian Journal 16 4 296 doi 10 1163 000000075791615397 ISSN 0019 7246 JSTOR 24651488 VAN OLPHEN HERMAN 1975 Aspect Tense and Mood in the Hindi Verb Indo Iranian Journal 16 4 284 301 doi 10 1163 000000075791615397 ISSN 0019 7246 JSTOR 24651488 Future Imperatives Hindi A Door Into Hindi Snell Rupert Weightman Simon 2016 Complete Hindi Great Britain John Murray Learning pp 52 62 ISBN 978 144410683 1 Gesenius Hebrew Grammar 1909 Archived 2017 08 13 at the Wayback Machine Wilhelm Gesenius 106 Gesenius Hebrew Grammar 1909 Archived 2017 08 13 at the Wayback Machine Wilhelm Gesenius 112 Exodus 4 1 King James Version Oxford Standard 1769 Isaiah 2 2 King James Version Oxford Standard 1769 future tense wordreference com Archived from the original on 3 February 2014 Retrieved 9 May 2018 All dialects Future markers غاد باش ح راح wordreference com Archived from the original on 3 February 2014 Retrieved 9 May 2018 Bybee Joan Revere Perkins and William Pagliuca The Evolution of Grammar Univ of Chicago Press 1994 a b Li Charles N and Sandra A Thomson Mandarin Chinese A Functional Reference Grammar 1989 a b c d Holm John An Introduction to Pidgins and Creoles Cambridge Univ Press 2000 Sakoda Kent and Siegel Jeff Pidgin Grammar Bess Press 2003 p 38 Turnbull Wally R Creole Made Easy Light Messages 2000 p 13 External links Edit4 Future Tenses Explained English Grammar Reference and Exercises Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Future tense amp oldid 1132915100, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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