The most common way to talk about things and events in the future is to use the verb ‘will’. This is the Future Simple tense.
To form the Future Simple in positive sentences, we use:
will (’ll) + the verb (base form without ‘to’)
Singular | Plural |
I will (’ll) sing You’ll sing He/she/it’ll sing | We’ll sing You’ll sing They’ll sing |
To make negative statements in Future Simple, we use:
will not (won’t) + the verb (base form without ‘to’)
Singular | Plural |
I will not (won’t) eat You won’t eat He/she/it won’t eat | We won’t eat You won’t eat They won’t eat |
To make questions in Future Simple, we rearrange the word order and use:
will + subject + the verb (base form without ‘to’)
Singular | Plural |
Will I be fine? Will you be fine? Will he/she/it be fine? | Will we be fine? Will you be fine? Will they be fine? |
Let’s summarize:
We can use ‘will’ in English in several ways:
1) to describe a quick decision that you have made at the time of speaking:
2) to make a prediction about what you think is going to happen – even if there is no firm evidence for that prediction:
3) to offer to do something:
4) when making a promise:
5) to make a suggestion (with ‘shall‘):
6) to ask people to do something:
We can use ‘shall’ instead of ‘will’ when asking for a decision, making polite offers or suggestions, or in more formal situations.
We form questions with ‘shall’ like this:
(question word) + shall + subject + the verb (base form without ‘to’)
Note: We can start the question with ‘shall’ and no question word if it is not required. |
Singular | Plural |
Shall I visit? Shall you visit? Shall he/she/it visit? | Shall we visit? Shall you visit? Shall they visit? |
Note: We can use ‘shall’ to talk about future actions and events, but it is only used with ‘I’ or ‘we’ and mostly in British English. |
Watch this video from Crown Academy of English to understand how to use ‘will’ to describe future actions and events correctly:
Read more about future tenses:
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