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Picnic Posted 16 years ago
Grammar

What is "Will have spent"

does it even exist?
  

Top answer

Yes. As far as I know it's called "the past in the future". Example:- Tomorrow Jean and Ken will hae been married twenty years.

  • Yes.
  • As far as I know it's called "the past in the future".
  • Example:- Tomorrow Jean and Ken will hae been married twenty years.
  • -The plane will have landed by then.
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6 Answers
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Yes.

As far as I know it's called "the past in the future".

Example:- Tomorrow Jean and Ken will hae been married twenty years.
-The plane will have landed by then.
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then what is would?

I thought it would work

the plane would have landed by then
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Alex-93As far as I know it's called "the past in the future".
You probably mean the future perfect tense.

"I will have soent all my money by the end of the month"
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lagatawYou probably mean the future perfect tense."I will have soent all my money by the end of the month"
Yes, that's another word for it. The one I used to hear in school, the name I mentioned earlier is taken from my grammar book.
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I will have spent all my money by next Saturday.
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Here's something that may help you understand one of the differences between will have and would have.

Suppose you and your family are going to pick someone up at the airport. Before the plane has landed you start out, saying:

"Let's start now for the airport. It will take us a half hour to reach the airport. The plane will have landed by then. We won't

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