The Future Perfect Continuous (or Future Perfect Progressive) is constructed this way:
Here are some examples of Future Perfect Continuous verbs with I, you, he/she/it, they, and we.
- 1. I will have been talking. I will have been walking. I will have been dancing. I will have been eating.
- 2. You will have been talking. You will have been walking. You will have been dancing. You will have been eating.
- 3. She/He/It will have been talking. She/He/It will have been walking. She/He/It will have been dancing. She/He/It will have been eating.
- 4. They will have been talking. They will have been walking. They will have been dancing. They will have been eating.
- 5. We will have been talking. We will have been walking. We will have been dancing. We will have been eating.
- 1. Affirmative Usage (e.g., He will have been teaching English as a Foreign language for forty years by the time he retires.)
- 2. Negative Usage (e.g., She will not have been living there for very long when she moves.)
- 3. Yes/No Questions (e.g., Will you have been working at your company for many years when you retire?)
- 4. Short Answers (e.g., Yes, he will have been. No, he won't have been. Or, Yes, he will have. No, he won't have.)
- 5. WH- Questions (e.g., How long will the children have been sleeping when the alarm goes off?)
Here are some examples:
- She will have been sleeping for only four hours when the alarm goes off.
- We will have been driving for fifteen hours by the time we arrive in Los Angeles.
- At midnight, I will have been studying English grammar tenses for three hours.
- He is going to move next year. He will have been living in the same house for twenty years when he moves.
For example:
- He is going to move next year. He will have lived in the same house for twenty years when he moves.
- It's 11 p.m. At midnight, I will have studied English grammar tenses for three hours.
Source:
www.teaching-esl-to-adults.com
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