material didactico futuro will
TRANSCRIPT
Comunicación Productiva en Inglés.Comunicación Productiva en Inglés.
FUTURO SIMPLE
SIMPLE FUTURE
USO DEL FUTURO SIMPLE
El Futuro Simple es un tiempo verbal que se utiliza para describir acciones
que se van a desarrollar en el futuro sin necesidad de aclarar en que
momento se producirán. Su equivalente en el idioma español es el Futuro
Imperfecto.
I CAN’T CARRY THİS LUGGAGE
I WILL HELP YOU.
I am so sleepy and tired.
I will get you some coffee..
También se puede expresar el tiempo en el que se desarrollará la acción, por ejemplo:
People will use more hybrid cars in 2020.
Affirmative:Affirmative:
Subject + will + main verbI will dance
He will dance
They will dance
Negative:Negative:
Subject + will + not + main verb
I will not dance
He will not dance
They will not dance
Questions:Questions:Will + Subject + main verb
Will you dance?
Will she dance?
Will they dance?Yes I will.
No, I will not.
También se puede usar en la afirmación la contracción de WILL colocando ’ll al pronombre y en la negación en lugar de WILL NOT se puede utilizar la forma contraída WON’T.
Ejemplos
What would you like to
drink, madam? I’ll have some orange juice,
please.
It’s my secret…
I won’t tell your secret to anyone. I PROMISE.
Give me your money or I’ll
kill you.
se puede usar will/won’t con estas expresiones:
I thinkI think I believeI believe I hopeI hope I am sureI am sureProbablyProbably MaybeMaybePerhapsPerhaps
- I’m sure they’ll help me.
- He’ll probably pass his class.
- Perhaps she’ll talk to me.
- I think It will be sunny tomorrow. - She believes she will win the
lottery.
Exercise:
IS THE FUTURE AS SUCH?
INSTRUCTIONS:
•Read the following text. •Copy the ideas that are in future
•Paraphrase with your own words the idea of the sentence
Ghosts of the Future
by Loren Cobb
The news these days is filled with intimations of catastrophe. Will the approaching decline in worldwide petroleum reserves cause wars and famine? Have we caused global warming, and if so, will we suffer unimaginable climate change? These are just two of the ghosts that haunt our misty visions of the future. Earlier generations had their own ghosts. Most of us can well remember the fear of nuclear holocaust, and I have often thought about that dark period from about 1940 to 1942, when it must have seemed to any rational observer that all of civilization was about to destroy itself. Looking into the deep future, astrophysicists predict that our sun will someday turn into a red giant not unlike Betelgeuse, the huge red star on Orion's left shoulder. When this happens its diameter will rapidly expand out beyond the orbit of the Earth, utterly incinerating our entire planet. Fortunately this disaster lies some five billion years in the future, so few people stay up at night worrying about it.
How can we weigh all of the factors describing an anticipated future disaster, to determine what is worth worrying about? How do we balance the size of a potential disaster against its depth in the future and the certainty of our knowledge? These are questions we can answer, concluding with a troubling example: the potential disruption of the oceanic currents due to global warming.
Taken from: http://tqe.quaker.org/2006/TQE146-EN-Ghosts.html, for educative purposes