When You Will Arrive Tonight, We Will Go Out For Dinner. When You Arrive Tonight, We Will Go Out For Dinner
When You Will Arrive Tonight, We Will Go Out For Dinner. When You Arrive Tonight, We Will Go Out For Dinner
When You Will Arrive Tonight, We Will Go Out For Dinner. When You Arrive Tonight, We Will Go Out For Dinner
Simple future has two different forms in English: "will" and "be going to."
WILL+VERB
Voluntary action (I will send you the information once I get it)
Complaint or request (I will not make you dinner)
Promise (I will call you when we arrive)
AM/IS/ARE+GOING TO+VERB
Express a plan (I am going to be a doctor when I grow up)
WILL/ BE GOING TO
Express a prediction (He will be the next president/He is going to be the next president)
Like all future forms, the simple future cannot be used in clauses beginning with time
expressions such as: when, while, before, after, by the time, as soon as, if, unless, etc
● When you will arrive tonight, we will go out for dinner. Not Correct
● When you arrive tonight, we will go out for dinner. Correct
Adverbs
You will never help him
You are never going to meet her
Modal verbs of probability
Modal verbs of probability are used to express an opinion of the speaker based on
information that the speaker has. Put another way, you use modal verbs when
you want to guess something.
He must be at work, is 10 oclock
Use must plus the verb when you are almost 100 percent sure that something is
the case. The construction would be:
Using Could
Use could to express a possibility which is one of many. This form is not as strong
as might or may. It is just one of a number of possibilities. The construction in the
present would be:
Can't or Couldn't
Use can't to express an opinion that you are 100 percent sure is not true. Use
must be or must have been if you are sure in a positive sense but can't be, can't
have been, or couldn't have been if you are sure in a negative sense.
have
In general, have to expresses impersonal obligation. The subject of have to is
obliged or forced to act by a separate, external power (for example, the Law or
school rules)
auxiliary main to-infiniti
verb verb ve
subject
have
● I must go.
The basic structure for must is:
must base
Like all auxiliary verbs, must cannot be followed by t o. So, we say: