词汇 | grammar_british-grammar_will | ||||
释义 | WillWill: formAffirmative formWill comes first in the verb phrase in a statement (after the subject and before another verb). It is often contracted to ’ll in informal situations:
Will cannot be used with another modal verb:
Will can be followed by have to or be able to:
See also: Must and have (got) to? Negative formThe negative form of will is won’t. We don’t use don’t, doesn’t, didn’t with will:
We use the full form will not in formal contexts or when we want to emphasise something:
See also: Modality: forms Question formThe subject and will change position to form questions. We don’t use do, does, did:
We can use will and won’t in question tags:
Will or ’ll?We commonly use ’ll as the short form of will and shall. In speaking, will and shall are usually contracted to ’ll, especially after subject pronouns (I, we, you, they, he, she, it):
However, in some contexts ’ll is normally the only choice. In such cases, ’ll is best not seen as a contraction of either will or shall, but as an independent form. As an independent form, ’ll is often used to indicate a personal decision:
’ll is also used for indicating decisions or arrangements where will or shall would sound too direct and too formal:
Warning: A noun phrase + ’ll is not normally acceptable in writing:
’ll is not used in a tag or a short answer: [talking about the offer of a cheap hotel room]
See also: Future: will and shall Will: usesCertainty in the futureOne of the main uses of will is to refer to things in the future that we think are certain:
[talking to a child]
See also: Modal verbs in past, present and future time Making predictionsWill is used to make predictions about the future:
Some predictions are about facts – things that we know always happen:
Some predictions are about the present:
Conditional sentencesWe often use will (or the contracted form ’ll) in the main clause of a conditional sentence when we talk about possible situations in the future:
See also: Conditionals Intentions and decisionsWe use will for immediate intentions and decisions. We usually use ’ll, not will, after I think:
We use will and be going to for decisions, intentions and plans. We use will when the decision is immediate and be going to when we have already made a plan:
See also: Future Willingness and offersWill is often used to express someone’s willingness to do something or to make offers. It is often used with I in this context:
PromisesWe use will to make promises:
See also: Promise Requests and invitationsWe often make requests or invitations with will:
CommandsWe sometimes give commands or orders using will:
It is also used to insist that someone does something:
[parent to child]
See also: Commands and instructions General truthsWill is used to describe something the speaker thinks is generally true: [talking about making complaints at hospitals]
Habitual eventsWe use will to refer to events that happen often: [talking about a younger sister, Celia, who doesn’t eat properly; she refers to Celia]
DisapprovalWill is also used to talk about repeated behaviour which the speaker does not like or approve of. Will is normally stressed here:
Inanimate objects (things)Will may be used to refer to inanimate objects and how they respond to humans, most typically in the negative form won’t:
Will and shallWe use will for all persons, but we often use shall with I and we. Will (’ll) is generally less formal than shall when used with I and we:
Shall also has a special legal use for talking about rules and laws. In these cases, we often use it with third-person subjects:
Shall and will are both used to talk about intentions and decisions. Shall is more formal than will. Compare
Spoken English: In speaking ’ll is much more common than will and shall. Will is much more common than shall in both speaking and writing. See also: Would or will? Will: typical errorWe use will or ’ll to express intentions or decisions, or to make offers, not the present simple:
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