Future Tense | Simple Exercises
Answer keys are provided, but without explanations. If you write “I will call you when I will get home” (wrong!), the key simply shows the correction—no “why.” A beginner might stay confused.
Choose the correct form of the verb in parentheses to complete the sentences: future tense simple exercises
The future simple is remarkably consistent because it uses the same auxiliary verb for all subjects. Subject + will + [root form of verb]. Example: "I will call you tomorrow". Answer keys are provided, but without explanations
It’s not flashy. It won’t gamify your learning with dancing robots. But if you want a 20-minute, low-stress workout that actually cements when to use “will” for spontaneous decisions, promises, and predictions—this is surprisingly effective. Perfect for false beginners who need to patch a leaky foundation before moving to the fancy stuff. Subject + will + [root form of verb]
At first glance, it looks deceptively basic. Fill-in-the-blanks. Sentence scrambles. “Will” vs. “shall” choices. You might think, “I’m past this.” But that’s exactly where its genius lies.