Will vs. Going to vs. Present Continuous (for future) – English Grammar Exercises for B1

Grammar » Grammar Exercises for B1 » Future Forms (Will / Going to / Present Continuous (for future)) – English Grammar Exercises for B1

Exercises:   123456789101112

Your friend is calling to invite you to a movie tonight, but you already have a dentist appointment. Choose the correct future form (A, B, C, or D) to complete the phone conversation naturally.

 Friend: “Hey! Do you want to go to the cinema tonight?”

     You: “I would love to, but I can’t. I ______ the dentist at 6:30 PM. I made the appointment last week.”

     (A) will see

     (B) see

     (C) am seeing

     (D) will seeing

 Friend: “Oh, come on! You can cancel it. The new Marvel movie ______ at exactly 7:00 PM!”

     (A) is starting

     (B) starts

     (C) will start

     (D) is going to start

3   You: “I can’t miss this appointment. Look at my swollen cheek on the video call! It ______ a      very painful extraction.”

     (A) is going to be

     (B) will be

     (C) is being

     (D) be

 Friend: “Oh wow, that looks terrible! You must be in so much pain. I ______ over to bring you some painkillers right now.”

     (A) am coming

     (B) am going to come

     (C) come

     (D) will come

 You: “No, it’s fine, I have some. After the appointment, I ______ straight home to sleep. I decided that this morning.”

     (A) will go

     (B) am going to go

     (C) go

     (D) am go

 Friend: “That’s a pity. Well, Mark and I ______ dinner at the burger place before the movie. We reserved a booth.”

     (A) will have

     (B) have

     (C) are having

     (D) are going have

 Friend: “Since you can’t come, I have an extra ticket. I ______ my brother to see if he wants it.”

     (A) call

     (B) am calling

     (C) am going to call

     (D) will call

 You: “Good idea. Anyway, the dental clinic ______ at 8:00 PM, so I really need to leave the house soon.”

     (A) is closing

     (B) closes

     (C) will close

     (D) is going to close

9   Friend: “Wait, look out the window! The traffic is terrible. You ______ late for your appointment!”

     (A) will be

     (B) are

     (C) are going to be

     (D) are being

10   You: “You’re right, the cars are not moving at all. Okay, I ______ my bicycle instead. It’s faster.”

     (A) ride

     (B) am riding

     (C) will ride

     (D) am going to ride

11   Friend: “Good luck! What about tomorrow? I ______ a small party at my house. I have already invited ten people.”

     (A) am hosting

     (B) host

     (C) will hosting

     (D) am going host

12   You: “I can’t tomorrow either! My parents ______ to town for the weekend. We already booked their hotel.”

     (A) come

     (B) are coming

     (C) will come

     (D) will coming

13   Friend: “Oh, that’s nice! What time is their flight?”

       You: “Their flight ______ at 9:15 AM tomorrow morning.”

     (A) is arriving

     (B) arrives

     (C) will arrive

     (D) is going to arrive

14   You: “I am so sorry I am missing everything. I promise I ______ to your next party!”

     (A) come

     (B) am coming

     (C) am going to come

     (D) will come

15   You: “What about Sunday? I ______ the new art museum. I bought my entry pass yesterday.”

     (A) visit

     (B) will visit

     (C) am visiting

     (D) will visiting

16   Friend: “Sunday works perfectly! I don’t have any plans, so I ______ with you!”

     (A) will come

     (B) am coming

     (C) come

     (D) am going come

17   You: “Great! The museum ______ its doors at 10:00 AM, so let’s meet at 9:45”

     (A) is opening

     (B) opens

     (C) will open

     (D) is going to open

18   Friend: “Look at my phone battery, it’s at 1%. My phone ______!”

     (A) dies

     (B) will die

     (C) is dying

     (D) is going to die

19   You: “Don’t worry, I ______ you my portable charger when I see you on Sunday.”

     (A) am going to lend

     (B) am lending

     (C) will lend

     (D) lend

20   You: “I must go now. I swear I ______ you tonight after my dentist appointment to confirm our Sunday plan.”

     (A) text

     (B) am texting

     (C) am going to text

     (D) will text

ANSWER KEY & EXPLANATIONS

1  (C) am seeing

Why it is correct: When declining an invitation, using the Present Continuous is the most polite and convincing method because it proves you have a fixed arrangement with someone else (the dentist). The appointment is booked and confirmed in your diary.

Distractor Analysis: (A) is for spontaneous decisions. (B) is a daily routine. (D) is structurally invalid.

2  (B) starts

Why it is correct: The start time of a movie at a cinema is an official, published timetable. For scheduled public events, we use the Present Simple tense.

Distractor Analysis: (A), (C), and (D) are not used for official public schedules.

3  (A) is going to be

Why it is correct: The speaker points to clear, present physical evidence (“Look at my swollen cheek!”). When making a prediction based on evidence you can see right now, you MUST use “going to”.

Distractor Analysis: (B) is a guess without hard evidence. (C) and (D) are grammatically incorrect.

4  (D) will come

Why it is correct: The friend is reacting to the swollen cheek and makes a sudden, spontaneous offer to help (“I will come over… right now”). Spontaneous offers and instant decisions require “will”.

Distractor Analysis: (A) and (B) imply the friend planned to come over before seeing the swollen cheek.

5  (B) am going to go

Why it is correct: The speaker says, “I decided that this morning.” This is a personal intention or plan formed before the moment of speaking. It does not involve another person, so “going to” is used instead of Present Continuous.

Distractor Analysis: (A) would mean deciding right now. (C) is a routine.

6  (C) are having

Why it is correct: “We reserved a booth.” This is a 100% confirmed, fixed arrangement involving the friend, Mark, and the restaurant. Present Continuous is the standard diary tense.

Distractor Analysis: (A) is for sudden decisions. (B) is a routine. (D) is grammatically incorrect.

7  (D) will call

Why it is correct: The friend just realized they have an extra ticket because you can’t come. They make an instant, spontaneous decision: “I will call my brother.”

Distractor Analysis: (B) and (C) would mean the friend planned to call the brother even if you had accepted the ticket!

8  (B) closes

Why it is correct: The closing time of a business (the dental clinic) is an official timetable. Present Simple is used.

Distractor Analysis: (A), (C), and (D) ignore the timetable rule.

9  (C) are going to be

Why it is correct: “Look out the window! The traffic is terrible.” This is undeniable present evidence leading to an inevitable outcome (being late). Use “going to”.

Distractor Analysis: (A) “will be” is used for guesses without direct visual evidence.

10  (C) will ride

Why it is correct: You see the traffic and instantly change your plan (“Okay, I will ride my bicycle instead”). A sudden change of mind requires “will”.

Distractor Analysis: (B) and (D) imply you planned to ride your bike before seeing the bad traffic.

11  (A) am hosting

Why it is correct: “I have already invited ten people.” The party is a fixed arrangement involving other people. Present Continuous is necessary.

Distractor Analysis: (B) is for timetables. (C) and (D) have grammar errors.

12  (B) are coming

Why it is correct: “We already booked their hotel.” This is a confirmed travel arrangement in the diary.

Distractor Analysis: (A) is for timetables. (C) is for predictions or spontaneous decisions.

13  (B) arrives

Why it is correct: The arrival of a commercial flight is an official timetable. Present Simple is used.

Distractor Analysis: (A), (C), and (D) are incorrect for public transport schedules.

14  (D) will come

Why it is correct: The word “promise” strictly requires the use of “will” for future actions.

Distractor Analysis: (A), (B), and (C) do not carry the communicative weight of a promise.

15  (C) am visiting

Why it is correct: “I bought my entry pass yesterday.” Purchasing a ticket makes this a fixed, confirmed arrangement. Present Continuous is required.

Distractor Analysis: (B) is for spontaneous decisions. (A) is a routine.

16  (A) will come

Why it is correct: The friend just heard about the museum and says “I don’t have any plans, so I will come with you!” This is a spontaneous decision made exactly at the moment of speaking.

Distractor Analysis: (B) and (D) imply the friend planned to go to the museum before you even mentioned it.

17  (B) opens

Why it is correct: The opening hours of a museum follow a published timetable. Present Simple is used.

Distractor Analysis: (A), (C), and (D) do not reflect the strict timetable rule.

18  (D) is going to die

Why it is correct: “Look at my phone battery, it’s at 1%.” This is clear, immediate physical evidence of something about to happen. Use “going to”.

Distractor Analysis: (B) is a guess without evidence. (A) is a routine fact.

19  (C) will lend

Why it is correct: The speaker is making a spontaneous offer to help solve the friend’s dying battery problem.

Distractor Analysis: (A) and (B) imply prior planning before the battery issue arose.

20  (D) will text

Why it is correct: “I swear” is a synonym for “I promise”. Promises always take “will”.

Distractor Analysis: (A), (B), and (C) are grammatically unnatural following an oath or promise.

GRAMMAR POINTS TO REMEMBER

1 The “Polite Refusal” Tense (Present Continuous):

  • When someone invites you out, the most polite and convincing way to say no is to use the Present Continuous (am/is/are + V-ing).
  • Why? Because it shows you have a Fixed Arrangement (a booked appointment or a confirmed meeting with someone else), meaning you cannot simply change your mind.
  • Example: “I can’t go to the movie because I am seeing the doctor.” (It is in my diary).

2 The “Sudden Reaction” Tense (Will):

  • Use Will when you make an Instant Decision, offer help, or change your mind right at the moment of speaking.
  • Example: “You have a toothache? I will get you a painkiller.” / “The traffic is bad? I will take my bike instead.”

3 The “Evidence” Tense (Be Going To):

  • Use Be going to when you can physically see/hear present evidence that something is about to happen.
  • Example: “My battery is at 1%. My phone is going to die.”

4 The “Timetable” Tense (Present Simple):

  • Use Present Simple for official, public schedules that do not depend on your personal choices (flights, clinic hours, movie times).
  • Example: “The movie starts at 7:00 PM.” / “The clinic closes at 8:00 PM.”

Exercises:   123456789101112

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