Tenses & Aspect

Using 'Will' for Predictions and Instant Decisions

Level A2 Tenses & Aspect
Key idea

Use 'will' + the base verb for predictions, promises, and decisions you make at the moment of speaking, as in "I'll get the door." and "It will be cold tomorrow." The form never changes: it's the same for every person and usually contracts to 'll in speech, with the negative shortening to won't, as in "She won't agree." Don't add 'to' after will, and don't use will for plans you'd already decided earlier, where 'going to' sounds more natural.

Examples

  • I'll get the door. a decision made right now
  • It will be cold tomorrow. a prediction about tomorrow
  • She won't agree. she refuses / it is predicted she won't

The full lesson

Everything in the video, in text.

  1. will + verb

    predictions & instant decisions

    The phone rings. You want to grab it โ€” but how do you say so in English? Get this one word right and you sound instant, natural, sure.

  2. will + base verb = a prediction, or a decision made right now.

    Use will for two things: a prediction about the future, and a decision you make right now, in the moment of speaking.

  3. will + base verb

    I / you / we / they will go
    he / she / it will go

    The form is wonderfully simple. Will plus the base verb โ€” no -s, no -ing, no to. And it's the same for every person.

  4. I'll get the door.

    instant decision

    First, the instant decision. Something happens, and you decide on the spot. I'll get the door.

  5. ๐Ÿ—ฃ๏ธ

    In speech, will โ†’ 'll : I'll, you'll, she'll, we'll.

    Did you hear that? I'll, not I will. In speech, will almost always shrinks to ll. It's the natural, everyday sound.

  6. It will be cold tomorrow.

    prediction

    Now a prediction. You look ahead and say what you think will happen. It will be cold tomorrow.

  7. I think they will win.

    predictions often start with 'I think'

    We often soften predictions with I think, I'm sure, or maybe. It still uses will. I think they will win.

  8. She won't agree.

    won't = will not

    For the negative, use won't โ€” short for will not. It's a refusal or a confident prediction that something won't happen. She won't agree.

  9. will vs going to

    will
    • decide right now
    • prediction
    • I'll get it!
    going to
    • already planned
    • intention
    • I'm going to call her

    Here's the line that confuses everyone. Will is for decisions made now. Going to is for plans you already decided earlier.

  10. โœ— I will to help you. no 'to' after will
    โœ“ I will help you. will + base verb

    will is a modal: will + bare verb, never 'will to'.

    The number one mistake: adding to after will. Will is a modal โ€” it takes the bare verb. Never will to.

  11. โœ— I will visit Rome next week. (already booked) an arranged plan
    โœ“ I'm going to visit Rome next week. use 'going to' for set plans

    Already decided โ†’ going to. Decided now โ†’ will.

    Second trap: using will for a plan you'd already made. If it's settled, going to sounds far more natural.

  12. Remember

    • will + base verb (no 'to')
    • predictions & instant decisions
    • contracts to 'll ยท negative = won't

    So: will plus the bare verb for predictions and on-the-spot decisions. It contracts to ll, the negative is won't, and never add to.