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Usage Examples Fut. Cont. vs. Fut. Perf. Cont.

  • They will have been waiting for four hours when her plane finally arrives. -
  • When I finish this course, I will have been learning English for fifteen years. -
  • Why will it be snowing next weekend? -
  • Will you be cooking dinner for the guests? -
  • What will they be wearing at the party? -
  • Will the baby have been sleeping for four hours by midnight? -
  • Jack won't be waiting for you when your train arrives. -
  • By then, we will not have been studying at the university for three years. -
  • Camila will be very tired when she gets home, she will have been jogging for an hour. -
  • Next Monday you will be working in our new office. -
  • Don't wait for me, I'll be studying at the library tonight. -
  • I will not be staying in this hotel next week. -
  • Tomorrow at five am we will still be driving. -
  • How will she be travelling? -
  • At that point, will Beth have been living in France for five years? -
  • When you go back home, you'll be missing the sea. -
  • Where will Jack be working next year? -
  • Will you be bringing your friends to the pub tonight? -
  • I will have been working out for two hours by noon. -
  • How long will Emily have been studying philosophy by the conference? -
Fut. Cont. vs. Fut. Perf. Cont.

Rules for using Fut. Cont. vs. Fut. Perf. Cont. in English grammar with examples.