Futuro Perfecto Continuo en Inglés

Choose a study mode

Play Quiz
Study Flashcards
Spaced Repetition
Chat to Lesson

Podcast

Play an AI-generated podcast conversation about this lesson
Download our mobile app to listen on the go
Get App

Questions and Answers

The future perfect continuous tense is formed using: 'will have been + ______'

present participle

By next year, I will have been ______ here for five years.

living

To negate the tense, you add 'not' after 'will' to form: 'will not have been + ______'

present participle

Common time expressions used with this tense include: 'By the time...', 'For...', and ______...

<p>Since</p> Signup and view all the answers

He will have been exercising regularly, so he will be ______ for the marathon.

<p>fit</p> Signup and view all the answers

Incorrect: 'She will ______ working here.' Correct: 'She will have been working here.'

<p>been</p> Signup and view all the answers

They will have ______ working when the meeting starts.

<p>been</p> Signup and view all the answers

Common mistakes include omitting 'have' and using the wrong form of the ______.

<p>verb</p> Signup and view all the answers

Flashcards are hidden until you start studying

Study Notes

Form Structure

  • Formation: Subject + will have been + present participle (verb + -ing)
    • Example: She will have been studying.

Usage Examples

  • To describe an action that will be ongoing until a specific future time:
    • By next year, I will have been working here for five years.
  • To emphasize the duration of an action in the future:
    • They will have been traveling for 10 hours by the time they arrive.

Negation Forms

  • Formation: Subject + will not have been + present participle
    • Example: He will not have been sleeping when you call.
  • Contracted form: won’t have been
    • Example: She won’t have been waiting long.

Time Expressions

  • Commonly used with:
    • By a certain time (e.g., by the end of the week)
    • For a duration (e.g., for three months)
    • When referring to a specific future date (e.g., by 2025)

Common Mistakes

  • Confusing with future perfect tense:
    • Incorrect: I will have studied for two hours. (Future Perfect)
    • Correct: I will have been studying for two hours. (Future Perfect Continuous)
  • Omitting "been":
    • Incorrect: She will have studying for an hour.
    • Correct: She will have been studying for an hour.
  • Misusing time expressions that imply completed actions:
    • Incorrect: I will have been done by noon.
    • Correct: I will have been working until noon.

Estructura de la Forma

  • Formación: Sujeto + will have been + participio presente (verbo + -ing).
    • Ejemplo: She will have been studying.

Ejemplos de Uso

  • Describe una acción que estará en curso hasta un momento futuro específico.
    • Ejemplo: Para el próximo año, habré estado trabajando aquí durante cinco años.
  • Enfatiza la duración de una acción en el futuro.
    • Ejemplo: Habrá estado viajando durante 10 horas cuando lleguen.

Formas de Negación

  • Formación: Sujeto + will not have been + participio presente.
    • Ejemplo: He will not have been sleeping when you call.
  • Forma contratida: won’t have been.
    • Ejemplo: She won’t have been waiting long.

Expresiones de Tiempo

  • Comúnmente se utilizan con:
    • Hasta un cierto tiempo (por ejemplo, para el final de la semana).
    • Durante una duración (por ejemplo, durante tres meses).
    • Al referirse a una fecha futura específica (por ejemplo, para 2025).

Errores Comunes

  • Confusión con el tiempo futuro perfecto.
    • Incorrecto: I will have studied for two hours. (Futuro Perfecto).
    • Correcto: I will have been studying for two hours. (Futuro Perfecto Continuo).
  • Omisión de "been".
    • Incorrecto: She will have studying for an hour.
    • Correcto: She will have been studying for an hour.
  • Uso incorrecto de expresiones de tiempo que implican acciones completadas.
    • Incorrecto: I will have been done by noon.
    • Correcto: I will have been working until noon.

Estructura del Tiempo

  • El futuro perfecto continuo se forma con:
    • will have been + participio presente (verbo + -ing)
    • Ejemplo: "They will have been working" se traduce como "Ellos habrán estado trabajando."

Ejemplos de Uso

  • Indica acciones que estarán en curso y se completarán en un momento futuro:
    • Ejemplo: "Para el próximo año, habré estado viviendo aquí cinco años."
  • Enfatiza la duración de una acción:
    • Ejemplo: "Ella habrá estado estudiando durante tres horas cuando comience el examen."
  • Predice resultados futuros de acciones en curso:
    • Ejemplo: "Él habrá estado ejercitándose regularmente, por lo que estará en forma para el maratón."

Formas de Negación

  • La negación se forma añadiendo "not" después de "will":
    • Estructura: "will not have been + participio presente"
    • Ejemplo: "They will not have been working" se traduce como "Ellos no habrán estado trabajando."

Expresiones de Tiempo

  • Expresiones temporales comunes utilizadas con este tiempo incluyen:
    • "By the time..." (Para cuando...)
    • "For..." (Durante...)
    • "Since..." (Desde...)
    • "In [período de tiempo]..." (En [tiempo]...)
    • Ejemplo: "Para el próximo mes, habré estado estudiando dos años."

Errores Comunes

  • Confusión con el tiempo futuro simple:
    • Incorrecto: "I will study for five years." (Estudiaré durante cinco años.)
    • Correcto: "I will have been studying for five years." (Habré estado estudiando durante cinco años.)
  • Omitir "have":
    • Incorrecto: "She will been working here."
    • Correcto: "She will have been working here."
  • Uso de la forma incorrecta del verbo:
    • Incorrecto: "They will have been work."
    • Correcto: "They will have been working."

Studying That Suits You

Use AI to generate personalized quizzes and flashcards to suit your learning preferences.

Quiz Team

More Like This

Use Quizgecko on...
Browser
Browser