Future Simple Tense (Will & Shall) — Exercise 8 (Q&A with Solution’s Explanation and Improve English with Words Power)
Practice the Future Indefinite Tense (will and shall Modals) with 10 exam-style questions. Each item includes the correct will/shall + base verb 1st form, an Oxford / Cambridge-style verb definition with POS notes, and a one-sentence explanation for every option (A–D) explaining why it is correct or wrong and what choosing it would mean. Ideal for both learners and teachers. Will and Shall are part of Tense and Modals. You are not only improving your English but also enriching your word power using Vocabulary Builder.
English Grammar Definition: Future Indefinite Tense (will + verb 1st form)
- Form: will / shall + verb 1st form.
- Examples: She will publish new books; We shall come back; will you stop it?
- Main uses:
- spontaneous decisions, promises, predictions, offers, neutral future facts, and decisions at the moment of speaking.
- Signal words: later, in 3050, in future, sooner, forever.
- Negatives / Questions:
will not (won't) / shall not (shan't) + verb 1st form;Will / shall + subject + base verb 1st form? - To learn more about it – Visit Here
Quiz Instructions
- Read each question and choose the best answer out of four given options.
- On top, header section of the quiz, you will see the “title of the quiz,’ ‘spending-time,’ ‘value of question in points,’ and ‘number of questions.”
- Below on footer, you will see Full Screen mode. As the name suggests, it covers the whole screen. It will save a lot of your time attempting the quiz.
- You can zoom the images given in the questions.
- After submitting the quiz, you can see your score and compare with other users.
- The Full Leaderboard link will take you to a page, where you can see all users attempts.
- Below the quiz box, there are explanation of each options. You can study and try again.
- Best of Luck!
Quiz Question, Answer and Explanation
Note: Do remember in the quiz box above, the questions and options will shuffle, so they won’t have the same sequence like 1, 2, 3, or A, B, C as below.
1. They __ the patch if the nightly tests pass.
A) will release B) shall release C) will be releasing D) shall have released
Verb: release — verb. To make a software version available to users.
A) Correct: will release — straightforward conditional future outcome.
B) Wrong: shall release — unusual with third person and legalistic in tone.
C) Wrong: will be releasing — suggests an ongoing rollout process rather than a single release event.
D) Wrong: shall have released — future perfect with shall is odd and asserts completion ahead of a timeframe.
2. We __ a fallback route to the legacy system if latency spikes.
A) shall route B) will route C) will be routing D) shall have routed
Verb: route — verb. To direct traffic or requests along a specific path.
A) Correct: shall route — promise/obligation by the team to switch to fallback when necessary.
B) Wrong: will route — acceptable but less formal in tone.
C) Wrong: will be routing — progressive nuance implies ongoing rerouting.
D) Wrong: shall have routed — future perfect and highly formal; implies prior completion.
3. He __ the post-mortem slide deck for the review.
A) will assemble B) shall assemble C) will be assembling D) shall have assembled
Verb: assemble — verb. To gather components or materials together.
A) Correct: will assemble — planned future action to compile the deck; natural with third-person.
B) Wrong: shall assemble — awkward with third-person and overly formal.
C) Wrong: will be assembling — suggests the assembly will be in progress (not necessarily finished) during the review period.
D) Wrong: shall have assembled — future perfect + shall is unlikely and overstates completion.
4. I __ the timeline in the doc after the PM confirms dates.
A) shall update B) will update C) will be updating D) shall have updated
Verb: update — verb. To change or bring information up to date.
A) Correct: shall update — formal personal promise to update the timeline once dates are confirmed.
B) Wrong: will update — less formal but still correct; differs in force.
C) Wrong: will be updating — implies ongoing editing at a future moment.
D) Wrong: shall have updated — future perfect with shall overspecifies completion.
5. They __ a mitigation playbook if incidents repeat within the quarter.
A) will author B) shall author C) will be authoring D) shall have authored
Verb: author — verb. To create written policy or documentation.
A) Correct: will author — future intent/prediction to create the playbook; idiomatic third-person.
B) Wrong: shall author — formal but unnatural for third person.
C) Wrong: will be authoring — progressive nuance suggests an ongoing authoring process.
D) Wrong: shall have authored — future perfect + shall is overly formal and uncommon.
6. We __ the incident details publicly once cleared by legal.
A) shall disclose B) will disclose C) will be disclosing D) shall have disclosed
Verb: disclose — verb. To make information known or public.
A) Correct: shall disclose — institutional promise to reveal details after legal clearance; shall emphasises obligation/authority.
B) Wrong: will disclose — acceptable but less formal or policy-like.
C) Wrong: will be disclosing — progressive tone indicates ongoing disclosures over a period.
D) Wrong: shall have disclosed — future perfect with shall overfocuses on completion.
7. He __ an interim status update every morning until stabilized.
A) will provide B) shall provide C) will be providing D) shall have provided
Verb: provide — verb. To supply or make available (information).
A) Correct: will provide — neutral future promise for repeated daily updates.
B) Wrong: shall provide — possible but sounds stilted for third-person recurring action.
C) Wrong: will be providing — future continuous emphasizes the ongoing nature; arguably close but changes tone to continuous provision.
D) Wrong: shall have provided — nonsensical for repeated future occurrences; future perfect is ill-suited.
8. I __ you a heads-up if I see any regression overnight.
A) shall give B) will give C) will be giving D) shall have given
Verb: give — verb. To supply information or notice.
A) Correct: shall give — personal promise by I; formal and committed.
B) Wrong: will give — acceptable but less pledge-like.
C) Wrong: will be giving — continuous nuance makes the action sound ongoing.
D) Wrong: shall have given — future perfect is too specific and unusual with shall.
9. They __ a post-release verification across regions.
A) will conduct B) shall conduct C) will be conducting D) shall have conducted
Verb: conduct — verb. To carry out or perform (tests, verification).
A) Correct: will conduct — neutral future declaration of planned verification activities.
B) Wrong: shall conduct — odd with third-person and overly formal.
C) Wrong: will be conducting — progressive implies verification will be ongoing at a future time.
D) Wrong: shall have conducted — future perfect + shall is unusual and overstates timing.
10. We __ a dedicated status channel for cross-team updates.
A) shall create B) will create C) shall be creating D) will have created
Verb: create — verb. To make or establish something new.
A) Correct: shall create — organizational commitment to set up the channel; shall indicates obligation/promise.
B) Wrong: will create — acceptable but less formal/obligatory.
C) Wrong: shall be creating — awkward continuous usage with shall; suggests an ongoing process.
D) Wrong: will have created — focuses on completion by some time and changes the emphasis.