will, to make predictions based on our opinions or expectations. We often use will with phrases like I think, I'm sure, I expect, or adverbs like probably, possibly, definitely., to express a decision made at the moment of speaking:, going to, to talk about existing plans or intentions for the future:, to make a prediction based on evidence you have now:, We use the form will + be + Present Participle, sometimes referred to as the Future Continuous:, to talk about an action that will be in progress at a particular time in the future:, to talk about events that will happen as part of the normal course of events, or routine:, We use the form will + have + Past Participle, sometimes referred to as the Future Perfect, o talk about an action that will be completed before a particular time in the future, we use the form will + have + been + verb -ing (it is sometimes referred to as Future Perfect Continuous):, If we want to focus on a duration of an action which is still ongoing at some point in the future, often used with by (2050, next year, then, the time, etc.) and in (ten years, two months)., modal verbs instead of will with Future Continuous and Future Perfect forms, to show different degrees of certainty (might, may, could), phrases with the structure be + adjective + infinitive, to talk about how probable it is that a future prediction will actually happen:.

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