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future perfect
[ fyoo-cher pur-fikt ]
noun
- a verb construction, in English made up of the auxiliary verb will followed by a verb in the present perfect, used to express an action or state to be completed at or before a particular point of reference in time to come, such as By this time tomorrow, you will have given your speech and Next month she will have been cancer-free for six years.
adjective
- designating a verb construction used to express an action or state to be completed at or before a particular point of reference in time to come.
future perfect
adjective
- denoting a tense of verbs describing an action that will have been performed by a certain time. In English this is formed with will have or shall have plus the past participle
noun
- the future perfect tense
- a verb in this tense
yvlog History and Origins
Origin of future perfect1
Example Sentences
"As the future perfect turns into the present perfect, we can apply ourselves to creating a tolerable present and future — for ourselves and for the rest of life," Nijhuis writes.
Sociologist Karl Weick argues that we can make sense of the future only if we envision it as having already happened — that we think in the future perfect.
“Sometimes you have to speak in the future perfect tense,” Mockus told the Guardian in 2013, “knowing you will not win.”
Never was the future perfect put to better use.
In the 19th century there was a huge number of utopias written about future perfect lives, but the Second World War changed that.
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