Practice Future Continuous Tense Quiz, Exercise, Test

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?
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Quiz Instructions

  1. Read each question and choose the best answer out of four given options.
  2. 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.”
  3. 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.
  4. You can zoom the images given in the questions.
  5. After submitting the quiz, you can see your score and compare with other users.
  6. The Full Leaderboard link will take you to a page, where you can see all users attempts.
  7. Below the quiz box, there are explanation of each options. You can study and try again.
  8. Best of Luck!
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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): orchestrateverb. 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: measureverb. 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: invokeverb. 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: performverb. 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: anonymizeverb. 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: executeverb. 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: throttleverb (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: invalidateverb. 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: snapshotverb/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: decommissionverb. 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.

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