Unit 1 computer users task Think over the following questions and give your answers


Will I/you/she/he/it/ we/they play



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КН направление І курс осенний семестр 2015-2016 (1-4 Units) (1)
Will I/you/she/he/it/
we/they play?

Will I/you/she/he/it/
we/they be playing?

Will I/you/she/he/it/
we/they have played/written?



Will I/you/she/he/it/
we/they have been playing/writing?



Wh-question

What will I/you/she/he/it/
we/they play?

What will I/you/she/he/it/
we/they be playing?

What will I/you/she/he/it
/we/they have played/written?

What will I/you/she/he/it/
we/they have been playing/writing?

Present Continuous

this week
at the weekend
on Monday

fixed arrangements (plans) in the near future (definite time)

She is seeing her dentist this week

Present Simple

at 10.45
at 5 am

timetables

The train leaves at 3 o’clock

Going to

in one year,
next week, tomorrow,
soon,
the day after tomorrow

1. actions intended to be performed in the near future (I’ve already decided to do it)

I am going to visit my parents on Saturday.

2. predictions about events when there is an concrete evidence that something is going to happen,-the situation makes it clear

The sky is absolutely dark. It is going to rain.

! Note: 'Will' is used instead of 'going to' when a formal style is required, particularly in the written language

The wedding will take place on May 8th.
The ceremony will begin at 4 pm, followed by a meal and a big party.



Future Simple

tomorrow,
today, 
later today, 
in five minutes,
in two hours,
in a year, 
on Monday,
on Saturday afternoon,
next …,
week/month,
this year,
soon,
I think,
I don’t think,
probably, perhaps,
I expect,
I am sure,
I wonder,
I believe,
After hope we usually use present (will is also possible)



1. actions or predictions which may (not) happen in the future /
predictions based on opinions, beliefs, intuition, knowledge, experience
with words and expressions such as: probablypossiblyperhaps,(I'm) sure(I) expect, (I) wonder
I’m afraid, I think

I am afraid somebody will steal my new car.
He will probably come back tomorrow.
I think, Sara will like the present you bought her.
I predict that Congress will pass an anti-piracy law soon. I don't think he'll come tonight.



2. actions which we cannot control and will inevitably happen

Summer will be here soon

3. on-the-spot, spontaneous decisions

Oh, I’ve left the door open. I’ll go and shut it.
Did you phone Lucy? – Oh, no! I forgot. I’ll phone her now.

4. request

Will you please help me to do my homework?
Will you please turn the stereo down, I’m trying to concentrate.

5. promise

Thanks for lending me the money. I’ll pay you back on Friday.

6. threat

I'll tell your parents what you did.
"I'll be back."

7. refuse

I’ve tried to give her advice but she won’t listen.

8. warning

Don’t be so noisy! Your Dad will get angry.

9. when the main verb is be even if we talk about planned events

I'll be in Athens tomorrow.
I'll be at a conference next week.

Future Continuous

in one year,
next week, tomorrow at 6

1. an activity that will occur in the future and continue for a certain period of time. We can specify the time when the activity is going to take place

Tom will be attending the conference next month. They'll be shopping all afternoon. I'll be working late at the office tonight. We'll be flying over the Atlantic Ocean for three hours. Tonight at 11 p.m. we will be dancing at the party.

2. actions that will be happening at a particular time in the future

Please, don't come at 9 o'clock. She'll be sleeping at that time.

3. things that we expect to happen in the usual course of events (the event is certain and will happen naturally)

will be seeing Ann tomorrow at the office. (we work together)
We will be meeting Mike at the festival this weekend.

4. in polite enquiries, when we wish to know what somebody's plans are (often followed by a request)

Will you be coming with me to the concert tonight? Will you be going to the post office today? Can you buy me an envelope?

!Note: We never use future forms in time and conditional clauses after: as long as, after, before, by the time, till/until, when(time conjunction), if(conditional), unless, in case, whenever, while, once, provided that (providing), suppose,/supposing, on condition that

Let’s buy more food in case James comes.(not: in case James will come).
If he has finished his project by tomorrow, I will be surprised.




If” meaning ‘whether’ especially after I don’t know, I doubt, I wonder etc. and when used as a question word – can be used with future forms

I doubt if they will hold their annual anniversary party this year.

Future Perfect

by the time,
by next week,
by then,
by next year,
by the year 2020

1. to express an action that will be completed in the future (usually before another action or event in the future)

I will have accomplished the task by the time my colleague returns. She will have cooked dinner by the time her husband repairs the car. Tina will have washed the dishes. By the time you arrive, my foreign guests will have left. He will have written his report. By the time we get to the cinema the movie will have started.

2. actions that will be completed before (by) a specific time in the future or before another action in the future

The student will have passed his exam by Friday. I will have finished the writing by midnight. By next January I will have lived here for 10 years. By 10 o'clock I will have finished the translation. By the end of the month we will have finished the course.
They will have known each other for eight years this June.

Future Perfect Continuous

duration of an action up to a certain time in the future



By the end of the year I will have been working on this book for a year.

“Shall” is rarely used to indicate future action in modern English. It is commonly used in sentences with ”I” or “we” and is often found in suggestions such as “Shall we go?”
Shall is alive and well when it comes to questions posed in the first person (i.e., with I and we). For example:

  • What shall we talk about?

  • Shall I open the window?

It is interesting to know:

In many requirement specifications, particularly involving software, the words shall and will have special meanings. Most requirement specifications use the word shall to denote something that is required, while reserving the will for simple statement about the future (especially since "going to" is typically seen as too informal for legal contexts). However, some documents deviate from this convention and use the words shallwill, and should to denote the strength of the requirement. Some requirement specifications will define the terms at the beginning of the document.


Shall and will are distinguished by NASA and Wikiversity as follows:

  • Shall is usually used to state a device or system's requirements. For example: "The selected generator shall provide a minimum of 80 Kilowatts."

  • Will is generally used to state a device or system's purpose. For example, "The new generator will be used to power the operations tent."

On standards published by International Organization for Standardization (ISO), IEC (International Electrotechnical Commission), ASTM (American Society for Testing and Materials), IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers), requirements with "shall" are the mandatory requirements, meaning, "must", or "have to". The IETF (Internet Engineering Task Force) defines shall and must as synonymous terms denoting absolute requirements, and should as denoting a somewhat flexible requirement.

A clause is a grammatical struc­ture which has a subject and a verb. A "time clause" begins with such words as when, before, after, as soon as, until,
These words may be followed by a subject and verb:
When he comes, we will see him. When + subject + verb = time clause



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