The document discusses the differences between the future simple tense (will/won't), present continuous tense (am/is/are + ING), and "be going to" construction for expressing future meaning in English. It provides examples of when each would be used - will/won't for predictions, present continuous for definite future arrangements, and "be going to" for personal intentions or conclusions based on present evidence. There is then a multiple choice exercise where the reader must put verbs in the correct future tense form based on short sentence contexts.
The document discusses the differences between the future simple tense (will/won't), present continuous tense (am/is/are + ING), and "be going to" construction for expressing future meaning in English. It provides examples of when each would be used - will/won't for predictions, present continuous for definite future arrangements, and "be going to" for personal intentions or conclusions based on present evidence. There is then a multiple choice exercise where the reader must put verbs in the correct future tense form based on short sentence contexts.
The document discusses the differences between the future simple tense (will/won't), present continuous tense (am/is/are + ING), and "be going to" construction for expressing future meaning in English. It provides examples of when each would be used - will/won't for predictions, present continuous for definite future arrangements, and "be going to" for personal intentions or conclusions based on present evidence. There is then a multiple choice exercise where the reader must put verbs in the correct future tense form based on short sentence contexts.