My grammar book prescribes the use of the future simple in the following sentence.
"I expect she will sunbathe until she gets badly burnt - that's what she did last year."
I would use "going to" in this sentence as it's base on past evidence and there's high probability that she's going to do that again. OK?
Since sunbathing assumes ongoingness I would also use the future progressive as in " I expect she's going to be sunbathing............." OK?
Last edited by ostap77; 01-Aug-2011 at 18:07.
Although most grammarians today do not consider that there is a future tense in English, some books still refer to the future simple ('I will sunbathe') and the future progressive/continuous ('I will be sunbathing'). We also have the (BE) going to future ('I am going to sunbathe') and the progressive/continuous form of that ('I am going to be sunbathing')
1)It's more like "may be yes may be no may be rain may be snow". Would it be hard for a native speaker to say "Yes" or "No"?
How about she's been on vocation where she got burnt three times already?
2) Would it sound also "in the appropriate context"? "I'm going to be needing a report from you", if a detective officer got to the crime scene and asked that from a policeman?
Last edited by ostap77; 01-Aug-2011 at 21:46.