Future Perfect

The future perfect is used to describe an event that is expected or planned to happen before another event in the future. It is a grammatical combination of the future tense, or other marking of future time, and the perfect, itself a combination of tense and aspect.

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Famous quotes containing the words future and/or perfect:

    It lives less in the present
    Than in the future always,
    And less in both together
    Than in the past.
    Robert Frost (1874–1963)

    There stood the purple spires with no breath of air
    Nor headlong bee
    To disturb their perfect poise the livelong day
    ‘Neath the alder tree.
    Robert Frost (1874–1963)