'will' + 'be' + present participle of the verb (ing).
Positive | Negative | Question |
---|---|---|
I will be waiting | I will not be waiting | Will I be waiting? |
You will be waiting | You will not be waiting | Will you be waiting? |
We will be waiting | We will not be waiting | Will we be waiting? |
They will be waiting | They will not be waiting | Will they be waiting? |
He will be waiting | He will not be waiting | Will he be waiting? |
She will be waiting | She will not be waiting | Will she be waiting? |
It will be waiting | It will not be waiting | Will it be waiting? |
I'll (I will) be waiting there at five o'clock. |
I won't (will not) be waiting there at five o'clock | Will you be waiting there at five o'clock? |
Positive | Negative | Question |
---|---|---|
I am going to be waiting | I am not going to be waiting | Am I going to be waiting? |
You are going to be waiting | You are not going to be waiting | Are you going to be waiting? |
We are going to be waiting | We are not going to be waiting | Are we going to be waiting? |
They are going to be waiting | They are not going to be waiting | Are they going to be waiting? |
He is going to be waiting | He is not going to be waiting | She is not going to be waiting |
It is going to be waiting | It is not going to be waiting | Is it going to be waiting? |
Use the Future Continuous to indicate that a longer action in the future will be interrupted by a shorter action in the future. Remember this can be a real interruption or just an interruption in time.
Notice in the examples above that the interruptions (marked in italics) are in Simple Present rather than Simple Future. This is because the interruptions are in time clauses, and you cannot use future tenses in time clauses.
In USE 1, described above, the Future Continuous is interrupted by a short action in the future. In addition to using short actions as interruptions, you can also use a specific time as an interruption.
In the Simple Future, a specific time is used to show the time an action will begin or end. In the Future Continuous, a specific time interrupts the action.
When you use the Future Continuous with two actions in the same sentence, it expresses the idea that both actions will be happening at the same time. The actions are parallel.
In English, we often use a series of Parallel Actions to describe atmosphere at a specific point in the future.
Like all future tenses, the Future Continuous cannot be used in clauses beginning with time expressions such as: when, while, before, after, by the time, as soon as, if, unless, etc. Instead of Future Continuous,Present Continuous is used.
It is important to remember that Non-Continuous Verbs cannot be used in any continuous tenses. Also, certain non-continuous meanings for Mixed Verbs cannot be used in continuous tenses. Instead of using Future Continuous with these verbs, you must use Simple Future.
The examples below show the placement for grammar adverbs such as: always, only, never, ever, still, just, etc.
NOTE: Passive forms of the Future Continuous are not common.