Originally posted by french frank
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Perhaps this is the moment to point out that all these future forms are a bit of a fudge, because Germanic languages originally had no future tense and it was presumably only when they came into contact with Latin that they began to think they might like one. The Germans bypassed their modals sollen and wollen and settled on werden, and its use as a future auxiliary seems to coexist quite happily and unambiguously with its original meaning to become.
We messed up a bit because we used both shall and will, perhaps interchangeably at first, but then the grammarians tried to codify what we were doing and so gave us 'rules' to break - and all the while the modal meanings were interfering with the future ones.
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