Grammar

Will and Shall 1

Using will for decisions, offers, promises, and predictions

Decisions Made at the Moment of Speaking

Use I’ll (= I will) when you decide to do something right now, as you are speaking. You are announcing your decision, not reporting a plan you made earlier.

  • “The printer is out of paper.” — “I’ll get some from the supply room.”
  • “What would you like to drink?” — ”I’ll have a coffee, please.”
  • “Did you email the client?” — “Oh no, I forgot. I’ll do it now.”

Do not use the present simple for these on-the-spot decisions:

  • I’ll call him now. (not I call him now)

You will often hear I think I’ll … and I don’t think I’ll …:

  • I’m a bit hungry. I think I’ll grab something from the cafeteria.
  • I don’t think I’ll stay for the after-work event tonight. I’m too tired.

In spoken English, will not is usually shortened to won’t:

  • I can see you’re busy, so I won’t stay long.

Offers, Agreements, and Promises

I’ll is common in three specific situations:

SituationExample
Offering to do somethingThat box looks heavy. I’ll carry it for you.
Agreeing to do something“Can you send this report to the team?” — “Sure, I’ll send it this afternoon.”
Promising to do somethingThanks for covering my shift. I’ll pay you back on Friday. / I won’t tell anyone what happened. I promise.

Won’t for Refusals

Use won’t to say that somebody (or something) refuses to do something:

  • I’ve tried to explain the new process to him, but he won’t listen.
  • The projector won’t turn on. (= the projector “refuses” to turn on)

Will you …? can also work as a polite request — it means “please do it”:

  • *Will you please turn the volume down? I’m on a call.*

Will vs. Present Continuous (Already Arranged)

Do not use will to talk about something that has already been decided or arranged. Use the present continuous or “going to” instead.

  • I’m flying to London next Monday. (not I’ll fly to London next Monday — the ticket is booked)

Compare:

Already decided beforeDecided now
I’m meeting the supplier tomorrow morning.“I need to talk to him too.” — “OK, I’ll meet you both at 10:30.”

Shall I …? / Shall We …?

Shall mostly appears in questions: Shall I …? and Shall we …?

Use these to ask whether it is OK to do something or to ask for a suggestion:

  • *Shall I open the window?* (= Do you want me to open it?)
  • I’ve got no budget left. What shall I do? (= What do you suggest?)
  • Shall we go to lunch?” — “Just a minute, I’m not ready yet.”
  • “Where shall we hold the meeting?” — “Let’s book room 3.”

Compare Shall I …? and Will you …? — they point in opposite directions:

QuestionMeaning
Shall I close the door?Do you want me to close it?
Will you close the door?I want you to close it.

Quick Self-Check

Question 1

'This report has a few typos.' — 'Oh, really? I _____ them right now.'

Select your answer:

Question 2

That laptop bag looks heavy. I _____ it to the conference room for you.

Select your answer:

Question 3

I've explained the schedule three times, but she _____ follow it.

Select your answer:

Question 4

_____ we take a break now, or do you want to keep going?

Select your answer:

Question 5

'I need those figures by Friday.' — 'Don't worry. I _____ them to you by Thursday.'

Select your answer:

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