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Questions and Answers
The future perfect continuous tense is formed using: 'will have been + ______'
The future perfect continuous tense is formed using: 'will have been + ______'
present participle
By next year, I will have been ______ here for five years.
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 + ______'
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 ______...
Common time expressions used with this tense include: 'By the time...', 'For...', and ______...
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He will have been exercising regularly, so he will be ______ for the marathon.
He will have been exercising regularly, so he will be ______ for the marathon.
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Incorrect: 'She will ______ working here.' Correct: 'She will have been working here.'
Incorrect: 'She will ______ working here.' Correct: 'She will have been working here.'
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They will have ______ working when the meeting starts.
They will have ______ working when the meeting starts.
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Common mistakes include omitting 'have' and using the wrong form of the ______.
Common mistakes include omitting 'have' and using the wrong form of the ______.
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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."
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Description
Este cuestionario abarca la estructura y uso del futuro perfecto continuo en inglés. A través de ejemplos y negaciones, aprenderás a describir acciones que estarán en curso en un momento futuro específico. También abordamos errores comunes para que puedas dominar esta forma verbal.