Tag Archives: future forms

Practice Passive Voice in Future Tenses - FREE Printable Worksheet

Practice Passive Voice in Future Tenses – FREE Printable Worksheet

Practice Passive Voice in Future Tenses

Passive voice = BE + PAST PARTICIPLE (3rd form).

Passive voice actions are done by people who are unknown or unimportant.

In future tenses and forms, passive voice is made as follows:

  • Future Simple Passive: The movie will be edited.
  • Future Continuous Passive: The movie will be being edited.
  • Future Perfect Passive: The movie will have been edited.
  • Future Perfect Continuous Passive: The movie will have been being edited. (rare)
  • First Conditional Passive: If the movie is edited, we will plan a release date.
  • Second Conditional Passive: If the movie were edited by Jo, it would look good.
  • Mixed Conditional Passive 1 (fut/past): If she weren’t busy soon, it would’ve been edited by Jo.
  • Mixed Conditional Passive 2 (past/fut): If it had been edited, it would be ready next week.
  • Modal Future Passive: The movie could / would / has to / might be edited.
  • going to (future): The movie is going to be edited by Jo.

We normally use passive voice in formal spoken and written contexts. We don’t normally use it to talk about everyday informal actions, e.g. I watched a film today. = A film was watched [by me] today.

Passive voice is most often seen / heard in the following contexts:

A. business English
B. creative arts
C. production
D. crime and punishment
E. natural disasters
F. invention / discovery
G. historical events
H. life story / obituary

Write sentences using the prompts. Embellish where possible. Say which context they belong to A-H:


Practice Passive Voice in Future Tenses

Direct download: https://purlandtraining.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/practice-passive-voice-in-future-tenses.pdf


This material is completely free to use, so please feel free to share it widely!

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Not Just WILL! – Guide to Future Forms in English

Not Just WILL! – Guide to Future Forms in English

So many students seem to learn only WILL and GOING TO for future and forget all the other future forms…

Future in English is a whole collection of different tenses and forms – not just WILL!

1. We need to select the most appropriate tense or form for what we want to communicate. If you only use WILL for every future situation, you will sound unnatural – apart from when it should be used. We use WILL for a number of very specific uses (below), rather than for discussing general future actions, like what you are doing tomorrow: use PRESENT CONTINUOUS or GOING TO instead.

2. Learners often overuse WILL, in some cases because their L1 has a particular future tense and they feel that WILL is equivalent to that. Try saying each example sentence below with WILL and you will see how unnatural many of them sound. There are NO dedicated future verbs in English so we use present and past forms instead, e.g. infinitive, present participle, past participle, and modal verbs like WILL and can.

3. Some learners only ever use WILL or GOING TO for future in English, but it is recommended to learn all the future forms, so you can always use the most appropriate one.

Download our free printable worksheets and revise the full list of tenses and forms:


Not Just WILL! – Guide to Future Forms in English

Direct download: https://purlandtraining.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/guide-to-future-forms-in-english.pdf


Not Just WILL! – Guide to Future Forms in English (Blank Version)

Direct download: https://purlandtraining.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/guide-to-future-forms-in-english-blank-version.pdf


Watch the recording of the free live class that I did on this topic:


This material is completely free to use, so please feel free to share it widely!

If you have any feedback about these free resources, we’d love to hear from you! Please leave a comment or review below or on Facebook or Twitter.