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Grammar

Will and Shall 2

Will for predictions, certainty, and shall in offers and suggestions

Will for Predictions

Use will or won’t when you predict something about the future — when you say what you know or believe will happen, not what someone has already arranged or decided.

  • Kate has her driving test next week. I’m sure she will pass. She’s a good driver.
  • They’ve been away a long time. When they return, they‘ll find a lot of changes.
  • “Where will you be this time next year?” — “I‘ll be in Japan.”
  • That plate is hot. If you touch it, you‘ll burn yourself.
  • Anna looks completely different now. You won’t recognise her.

Compare these two sentences:

SentenceMeaning
I think James is going to the party on Friday.He has already decided to go.
I think James will go to the party on Friday.I predict he will decide to go.

The first one reports a plan already made. The second one is your prediction about what he will decide.

Will with Probably, I’m Sure, I Think, I Wonder

Will (‘ll) often appears with words that signal a prediction or degree of certainty:

ExpressionExample
probablyI‘ll probably be home late tonight.
I’m sureDon’t worry about the exam. I’m sure you‘ll pass.
I thinkDo you think Sarah will like the present we bought her?
I don’t thinkI don’t think the exam will be very difficult.
I wonderI wonder what will happen.

Notice the pattern with I don’t think: you put the negative on think, not on will.

  • I don’t think it will rain. (not I think it won’t rain)

I Hope + Present Tense (Not Will)

After I hope, use the present tense — not will:

  • I hope Kate passes the driving test. (not I hope Kate will pass)
  • I hope it doesn’t rain tomorrow.

Will for the Present Moment

Sometimes will does not refer to the future at all. It describes what you believe is true right now:

  • Don’t phone Amy now. She‘ll be busy. (= she is busy now, I’m sure of it)

Shall with I and We

Shall is used only with I and we. You can say:

FormExample
I shall or I will (I’ll)I shall be late this evening. (or I will be)
we shall or we will (we’ll)We shall probably go to France in June. (or We will probably go)

In spoken English, I’ll and we’ll are the normal forms. The full forms I shall and we shall are less common.

The negative of shall is shall not or shan’t:

  • I shan’t be here tomorrow. (or I won’t be)

Do not use shall with he/she/it/you/they:

  • She will be very angry. (not She shall be)

Quick Self-Check

Question 1

Can you wait for me? I _____ be long.

Select your answer:

Question 2

I don't think the quarterly report _____ very difficult to write.

Select your answer:

Question 3

I hope the new hire _____ the training on time.

Select your answer:

Question 4

Don't call the Tokyo office right now. It's midnight there — nobody _____ in.

Select your answer:

Question 5

Lisa isn't free on Saturday. She _____ on the Henderson project all day.

Select your answer:

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