futuro perfecto

[indicativo]

When do I use it?

The future perfect is used when you want to say that something will have happened in the future at some point.

  • By the time I graduate, I will have taken 36 classes at North.

  • The students will have gotten cool jobs by then.

When do I learn it?

-Originally learned in: Spanish IV

-May be reviewed in: Spanish V, APSLang

Basic info:

All perfect tenses are always formed the same way and each conjugation contains two words. For what it means, return to "When do I use it?" above.

In this conjugation, the verb "haber" will be conjugated in the future tense.

The perfect tenses are often seen with the word "ya" (already).

*CAUTION*

There is a handful of irregular past participles that you need to be aware of. Check the out below!

–ído

* -er and -ir verbs whose stems end in a STRONG vowel (a, e, o) *

Caer --> caído

[fallen]

Creer --> creído

[believed]

Leer --> leído

[read]

Oír --> oído

[heard]

Traer --> traído

[brought]

(Son)reír --> (son)reído

[smiled / laughed]

-to

Abrir --> abierto

[opened]

Escribir --> escrito

[written]

Morir --> muerto

[died]

Poner --> puesto

[put]

Resolver --> resuelto

[resolved / figured out]

Romper --> roto

[broken]

Ver --> visto

[seen]

(Des)cubrir --> (des)cubierto

[(dis)covered]

(De)volver --> (de)vuelto

[returned]

-cho

Decir --> dicho

[said / told]

Hacer --> hecho

[done / made]

online practice

Conjugation practice on conjuguemos.com