Future Tense (Will & Shall Modals) — Exercise 1 (Q&A with Solution’s Explanation and Improve English with Vocabulary Builder)
This set trains you to use the Future Continuous (will be / shall be + V-ing) across realistic technical and business contexts. You’ll practice nuance (prediction vs. plan, progressive vs. punctual action, and register differences between will and shall). Each item gives: a sentence with a blank, four plausible options (all using will / shall Modals verb), a word note (POS + definition + related forms), and detailed explanations for every option so you understand both grammar and meaning.
English Grammar Definition: Future Continuous Tense (will + verb-ing form)
- Form: will / shall + be + verb-ing form.
- Examples: She will be publishing new books; We shall be coming back; will you be stopping it?
- Main uses:
- actions or events that will be in progress at a future time; to describe background activity in the future; to indicate planned ongoing activity.
- Signal words: at 3pm tomorrow, by then, tonight, during the deployment window, while, when X happens.
- Negatives / Questions:
will not (won't) / shall not (shan't) + verb-ing form;Will / shall + subject + be + verb-ing form? - To learn more about it – Visit Here
Quiz Instructions
- Read each question and choose the best answer out of four given options.
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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. During the deployment window they __ the traffic routing to the new cluster.
A) will be orchestrating B) shall be orchestrating C) will orchestrate D) shall orchestrate
Word (POS & meaning): orchestrate — verb. To design, coordinate and manage a complex operation involving many parts. Noun: orchestration; adj: orchestrated.
A) Correct: will be orchestrating — indicates the orchestration will be an ongoing activity during the deployment window (background process); neutral register for third-person.
B) Wrong: shall be orchestrating — unusual with third-person; shall here sounds formal/legal and is rarely used in everyday technical writing.
C) Wrong: will orchestrate — simple future focuses on the result (they will do it), not on the ongoing process during the window. Choosing it downplays the progressive, time-in-progress nuance.
D) Wrong: shall orchestrate — archaic/legal-sounding with third-person and misses the progressive sense.
2. I __ the new capacity metrics while the migration runs.
A) shall be measuring B) will be measuring C) will measure D) shall measure
Word: measure — verb. To quantify or determine the size, amount, or degree. Noun: measurement; adj: measurable.
A) Correct: shall be measuring — speaker’s formal pledge that they will continuously collect metrics during the migration; shall emphasises the commitment.
B) Wrong: will be measuring — grammatically correct but less formal pledge-like than shall for “I”; implies ongoing measurement but lacks the promise/legal tone.
C) Wrong: will measure — simple future implies a discrete measurement action rather than continuous monitoring.
D) Wrong: shall measure — formal but lacks progressive nuance indicating “while the migration runs”.
3. We __ the fallback scripts during the controlled failover tomorrow.
A) shall be invoking B) will be invoking C) will invoke D) shall invoke
Word: invoke — verb. To execute or trigger a procedure. Noun: invocation; adj: invoked (past).
A) Correct: shall be invoking — formal organisational promise: we will be in the process of invoking fallback scripts during the failover.
B) Wrong: will be invoking — correct progressive but less formal/obligational than shall for “we”.
C) Wrong: will invoke — signals a single action or decision point not necessarily ongoing during the failover window.
D) Wrong: shall invoke — formal but lacks the continuous-in-time meaning.
4. He __ authentication checks for every session while load testing proceeds.
A) will be performing B) shall be performing C) will perform D) shall perform
Word: perform — verb. To carry out a task; noun: performance; adj: performant (informal).
A) Correct: will be performing — expresses that he will be engaged in repeated/ongoing auth checks during the load test.
B) Wrong: shall be performing — odd with third-person; legal/formal register but unnatural here.
C) Wrong: will perform — focuses on individual checks or the fact he will do them, not the ongoing nature.
D) Wrong: shall perform — awkward with third-person and misses progressive nuance.
5. They __ anonymization routines on archived datasets through the weekend.
A) will be running B) shall be running C) will run D) shall run
Word: anonymize — verb. To remove or mask personally identifying information. Noun: anonymization; adj: anonymous.
A) Correct: will be running — indicates ongoing processing across the weekend.
B) Wrong: shall be running — nonstandard with third-person plural; shall reads stilted.
C) Wrong: will run — simple future suggests discrete runs, not continuous operations across the whole weekend.
D) Wrong: shall run — stiff/legalistic and non-progressive.
6. I __ the audit scripts while you verify the results.
A) shall be executing B) will be executing C) will execute D) shall execute
Word: execute — verb. To run a script or command. Noun: execution; adj: executable.
A) Correct: shall be executing — personal promise/commitment that execution will be ongoing while another task happens.
B) Wrong: will be executing — correct progressive but less pledge-like than shall for “I”.
C) Wrong: will execute — suggests a single execution rather than continuous or repeated checks.
D) Wrong: shall execute — formal but misses the progressive nuance.
7. We __ throttle rules dynamically during peak hour.
A) shall be adjusting B) will be adjusting C) will adjust D) shall adjust
Word: throttle — verb (technical). To limit throughput to control load; noun: throttling.
A) Correct: shall be adjusting — organisational commitment to ongoing tuning across the interval.
B) Wrong: will be adjusting — progressive and natural but less formal than shall for institutional policy.
C) Wrong: will adjust — implies discrete adjustments rather than continuous tuning.
D) Wrong: shall adjust — formal but not progressive.
8. They __ the cache invalidation routines at staggered intervals tonight.
A) will be orchestrating B) shall be orchestrating C) will orchestrate D) shall orchestrate
Word: invalidate — verb. To make data stale/unusable; noun: invalidation; adj: invalid.
A) Correct: will be orchestrating — indicates ongoing activity coordinating invalidation across intervals.
B) Wrong: shall be orchestrating — strange with third-person and overly formal.
C) Wrong: will orchestrate — denotes a single action or discrete plan; missing the progressive “during tonight”.
D) Wrong: shall orchestrate — archaic for third-person and non-progressive.
9. I __ snapshotting incremental backups while the pipeline is idle.
A) shall be performing B) will be performing C) will perform D) shall perform
Word: snapshot — verb/noun. To capture a point-in-time state; noun: snapshot.
A) Correct: shall be performing — personal commitment to continuous backup activity; formal tone.
B) Wrong: will be performing — progressive and correct but less promissory than shall for I.
C) Wrong: will perform — a discrete action; doesn’t convey continuous snapshotting during idle windows.
D) Wrong: shall perform — formal but non-progressive.
10. They __ decommissioning legacy nodes during the maintenance window.
A) will be decommissioning B) shall be decommissioning C) will decommission D) shall decommission
Word: decommission — verb. To take a system/component out of active service. Noun: decommissioning.
A) Correct: will be decommissioning — communicates the process will be ongoing during the window.
B) Wrong: shall be decommissioning — odd/legalistic with third-person.
C) Wrong: will decommission — simple future; could imply one-time action though close in meaning.
D) Wrong: shall decommission — formal/legal but non-progressive.