AKA: future simple
Examples: You will go to the ball! She’s going to be late. The carriage is leaving at 5pm.
Common sense suggests that a language which has past and present tenses must have a future tense. English, however, is a bit tricky since it does not technically have a future tense - that is, you can’t inflect (change) a verb to make it future as you can for the present and past. Nonetheless, we obviously can talk about the future, and we use several different forms to do this. When most people think about the future tense, they probably mean the use of will (I will call you later). Technically, will is a modal verb that expresses future intention, very confident predictions, or certain outcomes. Other ways to express the future include:
While there are small differences in meaning among the different future forms, their use is often idiomatic rather than strictly rule-based.
<aside> ⚠️ Careful!