Future Perfect Continuous (Future Perfect Progressive)
Das Future Perfect Continuous Tense beschreibt Handlungen, die vor einem bestimmten Punkt in der Zukunft eine Zeitdauer lang im Gange sein werden. Es betont die Dauer der Aktivität bis zu diesem zukünftigen Moment.
Wir bilden das Future Perfect Continuous mit will have been + der -ing-Form des Verbs. Die gleiche Form wird für alle Subjekte verwendet (I, you, he, she, it, we, they).
Bildung
Bejahte Form
Bilden Sie das Future Perfect Continuous mit will have been + Verb-ing. Kurzformen ('ll) sind im gesprochenen Englisch üblich.
| Vollform | Kurzform |
|---|---|
| I will have been walking for two hours by noon | I'll have been walking for two hours by noon |
| You will have been running all morning | You'll have been running all morning |
| He will have been cooking dinner for an hour | He'll have been cooking dinner for an hour |
| She will have been studying for three hours | She'll have been studying for three hours |
| It will have been raining all day | It'll have been raining all day |
| We will have been waiting for ages | We'll have been waiting for ages |
| They will have been working here for five years | They'll have been working here for five years |
Verneinte Form
Fügen Sie 'not' nach 'will' ein, um Verneinungen zu bilden. Die Kurzform 'won't' wird häufig verwendet.
| Vollform | Kurzform |
|---|---|
| I will not have been walking for two hours by noon | I won't have been walking for two hours by noon |
| You will not have been running all morning | You won't have been running all morning |
| He will not have been cooking dinner for an hour | He won't have been cooking dinner for an hour |
| She will not have been studying for three hours | She won't have been studying for three hours |
| It will not have been raining all day | It won't have been raining all day |
| We will not have been waiting for ages | We won't have been waiting for ages |
| They will not have been working here for five years | They won't have been working here for five years |
Ja/Nein-Fragen
Stellen Sie 'will' vor das Subjekt, um Ja/Nein-Fragen zu bilden.
Beispiele:
- Will I have been walking for two hours by noon?
- Will you have been running all morning?
- Will he have been cooking dinner for an hour?
- Will she have been studying for three hours?
- Will it have been raining all day?
- Will we have been waiting for ages?
- Will they have been working here for five years?
W-Fragen
Beginnen Sie mit einem Fragewort, dann verwenden Sie will + Subjekt + have been + Verb-ing.
Beispiele:
- What will I have been doing by noon?
- Where will you have been running?
- How long will he have been cooking?
- Why will she have been studying for so long?
- When will it have been raining?
- How long will we have been waiting?
- How many years will they have been working here?
Verwendung
Hinweis: Zustandsverben (wie know, like, believe, want) werden normalerweise nicht in kontinuierlichen Formen verwendet. Sie beschreiben Zustände statt Handlungen.
Mehr über Zustandsverben erfahrenÜbungen
Quizzes for this lesson will be available soon. We are currently preparing the question set and will publish it as soon as possible.
Downloadable PDF
PDF versions for this lesson will be available soon. We are currently preparing the materials and will make them accessible as soon as possible.
Verwandte Lektionen
Future Continuous
Learn to describe actions that will be in progress at a specific time in the future.
How to Use Future Simple
Understand when we chose will instead of going to or present tenses.
Future Perfect Simple
Learn how to talk about actions that will be completed before a future time.
How to use the future continuous
See how to talk about future background actions using will be + -ing.