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English Grammar

Future Forms

English has no single future tense — instead it uses several forms depending on whether you're expressing a prediction, a plan, a decision, or a scheduled event.

Textbook Future Forms

The standard forms taught in English courses worldwide — illustrated with real clips from native speakers, not invented examples.

Will — Predictions & Decisions

Subject + will + base verb

Used for spontaneous decisions, predictions, promises, and offers. "I'll call you back." The most versatile future form and the first one most learners encounter.

Going To — Plans & Intentions

Subject + am/is/are going to + base verb

Used for plans already decided before the moment of speaking, and for predictions based on present evidence. "It's going to rain — look at those clouds."

Future Continuous

Subject + will be + verb-ing

Used for actions that will be in progress at a specific future moment, or for politely asking about someone's plans. "I'll be working all day tomorrow."

Gonna / Wanna / Gotta

going to → gonna | want to → wanna | got to → gotta

Informal contractions of going to, want to, and got to. These are spoken forms — native speakers use them constantly but rarely write them in formal contexts. "I'm gonna call her." "Do you wanna come?" "We gotta leave now." Essential for sounding natural in conversation.

Future in the Past

was/were going to + base verb | would + base verb

Used to talk about a future event as seen from a past moment. "I was going to call, but I forgot." "He said he would come." Signals the event was planned or expected in the past — whether it happened or not.