B1 future_tense 8분 분량

Futur Antérieur - Formation

The futur antérieur describes a future action that is already 'finished' relative to another moment.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Expresses an action completed before another future event or specific time.
  • Formed by Future Avoir/Être plus the verb's Past Participle.
  • Used for future deadlines, certainties, and logical assumptions about the past.
  • Requires gender/number agreement when using the auxiliary 'être' with specific verbs.

Quick Reference

Sujet Auxiliaire (Futur) Participe Passé English Translation
Je aurai fini I will have finished
Tu auras mangé You will have eaten
Il / Elle aura compris He / She will have understood
Nous serons parti(e)s We will have left
Vous aurez reçu You will have received
Ils / Elles seront arrivé(e)s They will have arrived

주요 예문

3 / 9
1

D'ici demain, j'aurai fini ce rapport.

By tomorrow, I will have finished this report.

2

Quand tu arriveras, nous aurons déjà mangé.

When you arrive, we will have already eaten.

3

Elle sera déjà partie quand le film commencera.

She will have already left when the movie starts.

🎯

The 'Checkmark' Hack

Think of this tense as a mental checkmark. If you can imagine checking an item off a to-do list, you probably need the futur antérieur.

⚠️

Reflexive Trap

Don't let the 'se' fool you. Every single reflexive verb uses 'être'. 'Je me serai' is your new best friend for morning routines.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Expresses an action completed before another future event or specific time.
  • Formed by Future Avoir/Être plus the verb's Past Participle.
  • Used for future deadlines, certainties, and logical assumptions about the past.
  • Requires gender/number agreement when using the auxiliary 'être' with specific verbs.

Overview

Imagine you’re a time traveler. You’ve jumped ahead to next Friday evening. You’re sitting on your couch, feet up, with a cold drink in your hand. You look back at the week you just finished. You say to yourself, "By now, I will have finished that massive project for my boss." Or maybe, "I will have cleaned my entire apartment." That, in a nutshell, is the futur antérieur. It’s the "future of the past" or the "future perfect." It sounds like something out of a sci-fi novel, but it’s actually one of the most useful tools in your French toolkit. It allows you to talk about completion. It’s not just about what you will do (that’s the futur simple), but about what you will have done. Think of it as a way to set milestones. It’s the grammar of achievement and deadlines. Whether you’re planning a trip to Paris or just trying to survive a busy Tuesday, this tense helps you organize your future timeline. It gives you a sense of control over your schedule. And honestly? It makes you sound much more sophisticated when you’re chatting with your French friends. It’s like wearing a sharp suit instead of pajamas—it just adds that extra bit of polish to your sentences. Don’t worry if it looks intimidating at first. It’s actually built using parts you probably already know. If you’ve mastered the passé composé, you’re already halfway there. Think of it as the passé composé went to the year 3000 and came back with a shiny new auxiliary. Yes, even native speakers mess this up sometimes when they're in a rush, so take a breath. You've got this!

How This Grammar Works

Think of the futur antérieur as a grammar traffic light. It tells you when one action has stopped before another one starts. In your mind, you are standing at a point in the future. From that point, you look back at an action that happened earlier. For example, if you say, "When you arrive, I will have cooked dinner," you are imagining the moment of arrival. At that exact moment, the cooking is already a finished story. It’s all about the sequence of events. You use it to show that Action A happens and finishes before Action B begins. Both actions are in the future, but one is the "older" sibling. It’s also incredibly handy for making guesses or assumptions about the past. If your friend is late to a meeting, you might say, "He will have forgotten the time." You aren't talking about the future there; you're making a logical guess about what happened five minutes ago. It's a versatile little tense that acts like a bridge between what we know and what we expect. Think of it like a puzzle piece that snaps two future moments together.

Formation Pattern

  1. 1Creating this tense is like following a simple two-ingredient recipe. You don't need a PhD in linguistics; you just need to remember your auxiliaries and your past participles. If you know the passé composé, this will feel like meeting an old friend in a new city.
  2. 2Step One: Pick your Auxiliary. You have two choices: avoir (to have) or être (to be). Most verbs use avoir. Only a specific group of "movement" verbs (the famous DR & MRS VANDERTRAMP list) and all reflexive verbs use être.
  3. 3Step Two: Put the Auxiliary in the Future Simple. This is where the "future" part comes from. You need to know the future stems. For avoir, the stem is aur- (j'aurai, tu auras, etc.). For être, the stem is ser- (je serai, tu seras, etc.).
  4. 4Step Three: Add the Past Participle. This is the "past" part. Take the main verb and turn it into its participle form (like fini, mangé, or parti).
  5. 5Step Four: Check for Agreement. If you used être as your auxiliary, the past participle must agree with the subject in gender and number. If the subject is a group of women, add an -es (elles seront parties). It’s like making sure your shoes match your outfit—it just looks better.

When To Use It

You’ll find yourself reaching for the futur antérieur in a few specific scenarios. First, use it for deadlines. If you're at a job interview and they ask when you can finish a report, you might say, "By Monday, I will have finished the analysis." It shows you are organized and reliable. Second, use it for sequences. When you're ordering food in a restaurant, you might think, "When the waiter arrives, I will have decided what I want." It clarifies the order of operations. Third, use it for logical assumptions. If you see your neighbor’s lights are off, you might say, "They will have gone to bed." This is a classic way to express a "must have" feeling in French. It’s also great for promises. "I will have called you before I leave." It adds a layer of certainty to your speech that the simple future just can't match. Think of it as the "Checkmark Tense"—it's for everything you plan to tick off your to-do list.

When Not To Use It

Don’t overcomplicate things! You don't need this tense for a single, simple action in the future. If you’re just saying, "I will eat," stick to the futur simple (je mangerai). Using the futur antérieur there would make it sound like you're saying "I will have eaten," which implies something else is happening afterwards. Also, avoid using it if the timing is vague. If you don't know when something will be finished, the simple future is usually safer. It’s like using a laser pointer versus a flashlight—the futur antérieur is precise and focused on a specific point of completion. If you just want to light up the whole future, use the futur simple. Also, don't use it for things happening right now unless you are making that "logical guess" we talked about. If you're actually doing the action, use the present tense!

Common Mistakes

The most common trip-up is picking the wrong auxiliary. Many people forget that reflexive verbs (the se verbs like se lever or se doucher) always take être. You wouldn't say je me aurai levé (which sounds like a blender full of marbles to a French person); you must say je me serai levé. Another classic mistake is forgetting the agreement with être. If you're a woman saying "I will have arrived," you need that extra e: je serai arrivée. Then there's the auxiliary stem mix-up. Sometimes people use the conditional stem or the present tense by mistake. Remember: for this tense, the auxiliary must be in the futur simple. If you say j'aurais fini, you’ve accidentally jumped into the conditional (I *would* have finished), which might lead to some very confused dinner invitations! Think of it like dialing a phone number; if you get one digit wrong, you're talking to the wrong person.

Contrast With Similar Patterns

How does this differ from the futur simple? Think of a movie. The futur simple is the action scene—it’s what’s happening. The futur antérieur is the ending credits—it’s what has already been accomplished. If you say je lirai le livre, you are focusing on the act of reading. If you say j'aurai lu le livre, you are focusing on the knowledge you’ve gained after finishing it. Compared to the passé composé, the structure is almost identical, but the "feeling" is different. The passé composé is about the real past (things that actually happened). The futur antérieur is about the "imaginary past" (things we expect to happen by a future point). It’s like the difference between looking at a photo of a vacation you took and looking at a brochure for a vacation you’ve planned. Both show the beach, but the timing is everything.

Quick FAQ

Q. Is this tense common in spoken French?

A. Absolutely! It’s used all the time for deadlines and making guesses.

Q. Can I use it without a second action?

A. Yes, as long as there is a time marker like à midi or demain to show the deadline.

Q. Do I have to agree the participle with 'avoir'?

A. Only in very specific cases with direct objects before the verb, just like the passé composé. For now, focus on the être agreement!

Q. Does it mean "I will have" or "I will be"?

A. It depends on the auxiliary, but it translates to "I will have [done something]" in English.

Q. Is it harder than the simple future?

A. Not really! It just has two words instead of one. If you know your participles, you're golden.

Reference Table

Sujet Auxiliaire (Futur) Participe Passé English Translation
Je aurai fini I will have finished
Tu auras mangé You will have eaten
Il / Elle aura compris He / She will have understood
Nous serons parti(e)s We will have left
Vous aurez reçu You will have received
Ils / Elles seront arrivé(e)s They will have arrived
🎯

The 'Checkmark' Hack

Think of this tense as a mental checkmark. If you can imagine checking an item off a to-do list, you probably need the futur antérieur.

⚠️

Reflexive Trap

Don't let the 'se' fool you. Every single reflexive verb uses 'être'. 'Je me serai' is your new best friend for morning routines.

💡

Time Markers

Keep an eye out for words like 'quand', 'lorsque', 'dès que', and 'une fois que'. They are almost always followed by this tense to show order.

💬

Sounding Polite

Using the futur antérieur to make assumptions (e.g., 'He will have been busy') makes you sound very empathetic and polite in French.

예시

9
#1 Basic Completion

D'ici demain, j'aurai fini ce rapport.

Focus: aurai fini

By tomorrow, I will have finished this report.

A clear deadline set for tomorrow.

#2 Sequence of Events

Quand tu arriveras, nous aurons déjà mangé.

Focus: aurons déjà mangé

When you arrive, we will have already eaten.

Action A (eating) finishes before Action B (arriving).

#3 Être Verb (Movement)

Elle sera déjà partie quand le film commencera.

Focus: sera déjà partie

She will have already left when the movie starts.

Note the agreement '-e' for 'elle'.

#4 Reflexive Verb

Ils se seront couchés avant minuit.

Focus: se seront couchés

They will have gone to bed before midnight.

Reflexives always use 'être' in the future.

#5 Assumption / Guess

Il n'est pas là; il aura oublié notre rendez-vous.

Focus: aura oublié

He isn't here; he must have forgotten our meeting.

Making a logical guess about why he is missing.

#6 Formal / Professional

Dès que nous aurons reçu votre paiement, nous enverrons le colis.

Focus: aurons reçu

As soon as we have received your payment, we will send the package.

Common in business correspondence.

#7 Mistake Corrected (Auxiliary)

✗ Je me aurai douché → ✓ Je me serai douché.

Focus: serai douché

I will have showered.

Always use 'être' with reflexive verbs.

#8 Mistake Corrected (Agreement)

✗ Elles seront arrivé → ✓ Elles seront arrivées.

Focus: arrivées

They will have arrived.

Don't forget the plural feminine agreement.

#9 Advanced Usage

Une fois que vous aurez compris la règle, tout sera plus facile.

Focus: aurez compris

Once you have understood the rule, everything will be easier.

Focuses on the state of understanding as a prerequisite.

셀프 테스트

Complete the sentence with the correct form of the futur antérieur for the verb 'finir'.

Dans une heure, nous ___ nos devoirs.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: aurons fini

The verb 'finir' uses 'avoir' as an auxiliary. With 'nous', the future of 'avoir' is 'aurons'.

Choose the correct reflexive form for 'se lever'.

Demain à 8h, elle ___.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: se sera levée

Reflexive verbs need the pronoun 'se' and the auxiliary 'être' with agreement.

Identify the correct auxiliary for the movement verb 'aller'.

Quand tu rentreras, je ___ déjà au supermarché.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: serai allé

'Aller' is a DR MRS VANDERTRAMP verb, so it requires the auxiliary 'être' in the future.

🎉 점수: /3

시각 학습 자료

Futur Simple vs. Futur Antérieur

Futur Simple
Je mangerai I will eat (action focus)
Futur Antérieur
J'aurai mangé I will have eaten (completion focus)

How to Build It

1

Is it a DR MRS VANDERTRAMP or reflexive verb?

YES ↓
NO
Use AVOIR in future (aurai, auras...)
2

Does it use ETRE?

YES ↓
NO
Check again!
3

Ready for agreement?

YES ↓
NO
Always agree with the subject!

Auxiliary Checklist

🍔

Standard (Avoir)

  • Fini
  • Mangé
  • Bu
  • Vendu
🏃

Movement (Être)

  • Allé
  • Parti
  • Venu
  • Arrivé
🪞

Reflexive (Être)

  • S'est lavé
  • S'est couché

자주 묻는 질문

22 질문

It is a compound tense used to describe an action that will be completed by a certain point in the future. In English, we translate it as 'will have [done something]', like j'aurai fini for 'I will have finished'.

It uses the same rules as the passé composé. Use être for DR MRS VANDERTRAMP verbs and all reflexive verbs; use avoir for everything else.

Yes! It's very common for setting deadlines or making guesses about why someone is late. It makes your timing much clearer than just using the simple future.

Just remember 'aur-' for avoir and 'ser-' for être. They are the same stems used for the futur simple, so once you know those, you're set for both tenses!

Agreement is mandatory when you use être. You must add an '-e' for feminine subjects and an '-s' for plural subjects, such as elles seront parties.

Surprisingly, yes! We use it to make logical assumptions about past events, like Il aura oublié to mean 'He probably forgot' or 'He must have forgotten'.

Look for d'ici là (by then), avant (before), quand (when), and dès que (as soon as). These words help define the 'future' point you are looking back from.

Yes, it's the 'Future Perfect'. For example, 'I will have eaten' is exactly the same concept as j'aurai mangé.

The 'ne... pas' goes around the auxiliary, not the whole phrase. You would say je n'aurai pas fini.

In formal French, you invert the auxiliary and subject: Auras-tu fini ? In casual French, just use rising intonation: Tu auras fini ?

Not really, just remember the order: je me serai lavé. The reflexive pronoun always comes before the auxiliary être.

Not for this specific meaning. While je vais manger works for 'I am going to eat', there isn't a simple way to express completion without using the futur antérieur.

It's an acronym for verbs like Venir, Arriver, and Descendre that always use être. If you memorized them for the passé composé, you're already prepared!

It's used equally in both. In writing, it’s for formal deadlines; in speaking, it’s often for assumptions like 'Oh, they'll have left already'.

It sounds correct and precise. Using it won't make you sound like a textbook, but not using it might make your timeline sound a bit confusing.

Generally no. After si, we use the present or the imperfect. Use the futur antérieur in the main part of the sentence or after words like quand.

The main thing is to avoid pronouncing the 'e' in serai too strongly. It's often shortened in fast speech to sound like 's'rai'.

People will still understand you, but it’s a very noticeable mistake. It’s like saying 'I have went' instead of 'I have gone' in English.

The tense itself is regular, but the *auxiliary stems* (aur- and ser-) are irregular. Most students find them easy to memorize once they start practicing.

You use au moment où or just quand. For example: Au moment où tu liras ceci, je serai déjà parti (By the time you read this, I will have already left).

Sometimes they forget the agreement in informal writing, but the spoken form is usually very natural to them because it mirrors the passé composé.

Try making a 'to-do list' for next week and say out loud what you *will have done* by Friday. It's a great way to build muscle memory.

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