The future is by its very nature uncertain and can involve a subtle mixture of intention, desire, planning and inevitability. I taught English as a foreign language to advanced students for quite a few years and I remember it not being easy to explain the difference between the various ways of expressing the future.
We don't have a future tense, as in an inflected verb form like the French: Je partirai (I will leave) and we can choose either the present tense, modal verbs: will, shall, or going to.
All of these four options have corresponding present continuous partners to give at least eight variants:
I leave tomorrow
I'm leaving tomorrow
I shall leave tomorrow
I shall be leaving tomorrow
I will leave tomorrow
I will be leaving tomorrow
I'm going to leave tomorrow
I'm going to be leaving tomorrow
We don't have a future tense, as in an inflected verb form like the French: Je partirai (I will leave) and we can choose either the present tense, modal verbs: will, shall, or going to.
All of these four options have corresponding present continuous partners to give at least eight variants:
I leave tomorrow
I'm leaving tomorrow
I shall leave tomorrow
I shall be leaving tomorrow
I will leave tomorrow
I will be leaving tomorrow
I'm going to leave tomorrow
I'm going to be leaving tomorrow
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