Os tempos futuros em inglês são essenciais para falar sobre planos, previsões e intenções. Quando aprendemos inglês, é importante praticar essas estruturas para conseguir comunicar-se de forma eficaz e clara sobre eventos que ainda vão acontecer. Os exercícios a seguir estão desenhados para ajudar você a praticar os diferentes tempos futuros na língua inglesa, que incluem o Simple Future, o Future Continuous, o Future Perfect e o Future Perfect Continuous.
Existem várias maneiras de expressar o futuro em inglês, e cada uma delas tem um uso específico. Por exemplo, usamos o Simple Future para falar sobre decisões tomadas no momento da fala, enquanto o Future Perfect é usado para dizer que uma ação estará completa até um determinado ponto no futuro. Garanta uma boa compreensão de cada um desses tempos com os exercícios abaixo, preenchendo as lacunas com a forma correta do verbo. Vamos começar a praticar!
Exercício 1: Simple Future e Future Continuous
I think it *will rain* (rain) tomorrow.
By this time next week, I *will be travelling* (be/travelling) to Brazil.
She *is going to start* (be/going/to/start) her new job on Monday.
The meeting *will be* (be) held at 9 AM sharp.
Don’t worry, I *will help* (help) you with your homework.
They *are planning* (be/plan) to buy a new house next month.
What *will you be doing* (you/be/do) this time tomorrow?
I *am meeting* (meet) my friends at the mall tonight.
The plane *is going to land* (be/going/to/land) in 20 minutes.
He *will not make* (not/make) any decisions without consulting us first.
By the end of the year, she *will have been working* (have/be/work) here for a decade.
Tell him I *will call* (call) him back as soon as possible.
We *will be hosting* (be/host) a charity event next Saturday.
The chef *is preparing* (be/prepare) a special menu for the event.
It *is going to be* (be/going/to/be) cold tomorrow; don’t forget your coat.
Exercício 2: Future Perfect e Future Perfect Continuous
By the time you arrive, the show *will have started* (have/start).
In April, I *will have been living* (have/be/live) here for two years.
They *will have finished* (have/finish) the project by next Monday.
By 2025, scientists *will have discovered* (have/discover) a cure for the illness.
She *will not have returned* (not/have/return) from her vacation by then.
By the end of the month, we *will have been working* (have/be/work) on this for three weeks.
Next year, they *will have been married* (have/be/marry) for a quarter of a century.
He *will have been playing* (have/be/play) the piano for ten hours straight by midnight.
I guarantee by this weekend, all the invitations *will have been sent* (have/be/send) out.
They *will have been discussing* (have/be/discuss) the deal for over two hours by the time we join the meeting.
By the age of 50, he *will have built* (have/build) a successful business empire.
This time next year, I *will have finished* (have/finish) writing my book.
She *will not have been expecting* (not/have/be/expect) us to show up like this.
He *will have been working* (have/be/work) for the company for twenty years when he retires next month.
They *will not have been living* (not/have/be/live) in the city for long enough to see the changes.