The way I understand it, "will" is more like a prediction, while "shall" is more like a command.
A verb form indicating that an action or state has been completed at the present time, in the past, or will be completed in the future. Past Perfect Tense: I had sung Present Perfect Tense: I have sung Future Perfect Tense: I will have sung
No, only will have.
The Future tense of migrate is "Will migrate", the word (will) or (shall) can be use when the sentence is future. EX: My parents (migrate) "will migrate" to Canada next year
Would have been is in the past perfect tense.
The future tense of kneel is will kneel.
Present Perfect Tense: I have; You have; he, she, it has; we have, you have, they have Past Perfect Tense: I had; you had; he, she, it had; we had; you had; they had Future Perfect Tense: I shall have; you will have; he, she, it will have; we shall have; you will have; they will have Note: has is used in the third person, singular present perfect tense.
Present perfect and future perfect use "have"
It also use the auxiliary verb "will".The future perfect tense follows this structure:Subject + Will + Have + Past Participle.e.g. I will have danced.
Will and shall.
A verb form indicating that an action or state has been completed at the present time, in the past, or will be completed in the future. Past Perfect Tense: I had sung Present Perfect Tense: I have sung Future Perfect Tense: I will have sung
Will have gone.
No, only will have.
The Future tense of migrate is "Will migrate", the word (will) or (shall) can be use when the sentence is future. EX: My parents (migrate) "will migrate" to Canada next year
The conjugation will (to be) is part of the future tenses, while the word can is used by itself to mean a present ability, or as an auxiliary verb.Will and shall are used in :the future tense of to be (I am, I was, I will be)the future perfect tense (I shall go, or I will go)the future perfect progressive tense (I will be going)The auxiliary verb "can" is used with the infinitive verb form (without to) to indicate an ability to perform the action. (e.g. I know how to drive, therefore I can drive.) The past tense or conditional tense is "could".*Most grammaticists insist on using "may" for permission, so the expression "can I get the ball" would ask about your ability to get it, not whether you were allowed to.
The verb "am" is the present tense, first-person singular, of the verb "to be".The future tense, first-person singular would be "I will be" or "I shall be".(The form shall is more commonly used in the UK, in formal use, and to express inevitability.)
all you have to do to change a phrase to its relevant future form , Make use of the words "will be" or "shall be " Then change the form of the verb if required example 1. I am tired . Future form , I will be tired 2. It is shocking . future form, It will be shocking
All perfect tenses involve a past participle and a form of the verb have. This form is specified by the tense's name. The present perfect would use has or have, the past perfect uses had, and the future perfect uses the future form will have and at times shall have.Once the form of have has been determined, it is joined with the past participle of the verb to be conjugated. For example, the past participle of eat is eaten, dance's is danced, talk with talked, buy with bought, etc.