[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"grammar-page-en-future-perfect":3,"grammar-exercises-by-page-019b996c-756a-7595-8991-7fbfd497bca0":24},{"id":4,"title":5,"slug":6,"content":7,"language":8,"level":9,"displayOrder":10,"grammarTopics":11,"createdAt":18,"updatedAt":19,"generatorCategories":20,"readyImages":22,"ogImageUrl":23},"019b996c-756a-7595-8991-7fbfd497bca0","Future Perfect","future-perfect","## Focusing on Completion and Results in the Future\n\nThe future perfect is used to talk about actions that **will be completed before a specific time or event in the future**. The focus is not on the process, but on the **result** or the fact that something will be **finished**.\n\nIt allows speakers to look ahead to a future moment and refer to actions that will already be completed before that moment.\n\n## 1\\. Core Idea of the Future Perfect\n\nThe future perfect describes an action that **will be finished by a certain point in the future**.\n\nThink of it as:\n\n* looking forward in time\n* standing at a future moment\n* looking back at something that will already be done\n\nIn other words: choose a future time (e.g., *6 p.m.*) and describe something that will be finished before it.\n\nExamples:\n\n* “By 6 p.m., I will have finished my work.”\n* “By the time you arrive, she will have left.”\n* “They will have completed the project by next month.”\n\nThe emphasis is on **completion**, not duration.\n\nIf you want to focus on duration up to a future point, English often uses the *future perfect continuous* (e.g., *By 6 p.m., I will have been working for eight hours*).\n\n## 2\\. Structure of the Future Perfect\n\n**Positive form:** Subject + will + have + past participle\n\nExamples:\n\n* “I will have completed the report.”\n\n**Negative form:** Subject + will + not + have + past participle\n\nExamples:\n\n* “She will not have arrived by then.”\n\n**Questions:**\n\n* Will + subject + have + past participle?\n\nExamples:\n\n* “Will they have finished the exam by noon?”\n\n## 3\\. When the Future Perfect Is Used\n\n### A. Completion Before a Future Time\n\nUse the future perfect to show that an action will be completed **before a specific future moment or event**.\n\nExamples:\n\n* “By this time tomorrow, I will have packed my bags.”\n* “By the end of the year, they will have saved enough money.”\n* “She will have cooked dinner before the guests arrive.”\n* “They will have moved house before the school term starts.”\n\n### B. Expressing Expectations or Assumptions\n\nThe future perfect can express what the speaker **expects to be true** at a future point.\n\nNote: There are two common meanings.\n\n* **Future deadline:** use *will have + past participle* to say something will be finished before a future time.\n    * “By 6 p.m., I will have finished the report.”\n* **Present deduction (by now):** use *will have + past participle* to guess what is probably already true now.\n    * “He will have finished the report by now. (I believe it is already finished now.)”\n\nExamples:\n\n* “He will have heard the news by now (I expect he already knows).”\n* “She will have realized her mistake by now.”\n* “They will have decided on the venue by tomorrow.”\n\n## 4\\. Common Time Expressions\n\nThe future perfect is often used with expressions that clearly mark a **deadline** or **endpoint**.\n\nExamples:\n\n* by tomorrow \u002F by next week \u002F by then\n* by the time...\n* before...\n\nExample sentences:\n\n* “By the time you arrive, I will have finished.”\n* “She will have completed the course by June.”\n\n## 5\\. Key Takeaways\n\n* The future perfect focuses on **finished actions in the future**.\n* It answers the question: *What will be done by that time?*\n* The result or completion matters more than the process or how long the action takes.\n* Structure: will + have + past participle","en","B2",80,[12],{"id":13,"name":5,"level":9,"language":8,"isCompleted":14,"completionPercentage":15,"totalExercises":16,"completedExercises":15,"vocabularyLists":17},"019aef2f-df39-7b86-9f49-9526c9c9685c",false,0,2,[],"2026-01-07T17:06:20+00:00","2026-07-14T17:37:08+00:00",[21],"grammar_exercise_questions_tenses",[],"\u002Fuploads\u002Fimages\u002Fog_019b996c-756a-7595-8991-7fbfd497bca0.jpg?v=1784050628",[25,32],{"@id":26,"@type":27,"id":28,"grammarPage":29,"title":30,"instructions":31,"displayOrder":15,"isCompleted":14},"\u002Fapi\u002Fgrammar_exercises\u002F019d4948-55f1-7e88-97fb-012034561299","GrammarExercise","019d4948-55f1-7e88-97fb-012034561299","\u002Fapi\u002Fgrammar_pages\u002F019b996c-756a-7595-8991-7fbfd497bca0","Future Perfect – Work Projects and Deadlines","This is a fill-in-the-blank exercise. Click on each blank and choose the correct answer from the dropdown.\nSome sentences may have more than one blank, so make sure you complete all of them.\nComplete the sentences about work tasks using the Future Perfect to describe actions that will be finished before a specific deadline.",{"@id":33,"@type":27,"id":34,"grammarPage":29,"title":35,"instructions":36,"displayOrder":37,"isCompleted":14},"\u002Fapi\u002Fgrammar_exercises\u002F019d4948-55f2-7937-9358-62c7fec7ef02","019d4948-55f2-7937-9358-62c7fec7ef02","Future Perfect – Travel and Life Experiences","This is a fill-in-the-blank exercise. Click on each blank and choose the correct answer from the dropdown.\nSome sentences may have more than one blank, so make sure you complete all of them.\nUse the Future Perfect to describe experiences and places you will have visited by a specific time in the future.",1]