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This was an interesting unit, as I didn't realize that there were so many types of future tenses.
There were subtle differences between them. For example:
1. Predictions with no evidence use the simple future. (It will rain tomorrow.)
2. Predictions based on evidence use the \"be going + infinitive\" tense. (Based on the forecast, it's going to rain tomorrow.)
3. Predictions of the present use the future continuous tense. (It will probably be raining in London by now.)
4. Predictions of the past in the future use the future perfect tense. (If it rains again tomorrow, it will have rained on each of the last twenty days.)
In my experience, the present simple, present continuous, and \"be going + infinitive\" are used way more frequently to describe future actions than any of the future tenses. So I will probably concentrate on teaching those.