Scraped a 4h Spanish fundamentals YouTube video (transcript + OCR on 14810 frames), extracted structured content across 52 chapters, and generated fill-in-the-blank quizzes for every grammar topic. - 13 new GrammarNote entries (articles, possessives, demonstratives, greetings, poder, al/del, prepositional pronouns, irregular yo, stem-changing, stressed possessives, present/future perfect, present indicative conjugation) - 1010 generated exercises across all 36 grammar notes (new + existing) - Fix tense guide parser to handle unnumbered *Usages* blocks - Rewrite 6 broken tense guide bodies (imperative, subj pluperfect, subj future) with numbered usage format - Bump courseDataVersion 5→6 with TenseGuide refresh on upgrade - Add docs/spanish-fundamentals/ with raw transcripts, polished notes, structured JSON, and exercise data Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
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42. Future Perfect Tense
- Time range: 03:14:07 – 03:16:45 (duration 00:02:38)
- Source: A Complete Guide To Every Fundamental In Spanish (The Conclusion)
[on-screen 03:14:07] The Future Perfect Tense
[03:14:07] Spanish speaks about what will have
[on-screen 03:14:09] The Future Perfect Tense What will have happened at some point in the future
[03:14:09] happened at some point in the future in English it's a tense that's it's not used often but when it is it's a simple concept because all we do is put the
[on-screen 03:14:16] The Future Perfect In English: (will have + participle) | will have + [pa] | We will have + [pa] You will have + [pa] | Y’all will have + [pa] He will have + [pa] | They will have + [pa]
[03:14:16] construction will have and then we add any participle that we want after in
[on-screen 03:14:20] The Future Perfect In Spanish: (conjugation of “haber” > will have)
[03:14:20] Spanish however we have a slightly different concept that again uses the verb a but in the future perfect we use a conjugation that is equivalent to both of the words will have for the yo
[on-screen 03:14:29] The Future Perfect In Spanish: (conjugation of “haber” > will have) habré + [pa] | habremos + [pa] habras + [pa] | habréis + [pa] habra + [pa] | habran + [pa]
[03:14:29] pronoun we have the word AB which is a conjugation of a plus any participle that we want after for two we have abas for El we have Abra for noos we have abos with no accent making it the only conjugation of a in the future perfect with no accent for votos we have ab and for AOS we have Aban as you can probably tell by looking at the chart the ending
[on-screen 03:14:51] The Future Perfect In Spanish: (conjugation of “haber” > will have) habré + [pa] | habremos + [pa] habras + [pa] | habréis + [pa] habra + [pa] | habran + [pal]
[03:14:51] of all of these conjugations of a
[on-screen 03:14:53] The Future Tense In Spanish: (infinitive form + ending letters) é emos as éis a an
[03:14:53] perfectly correspond to the ending pattern of verbs in the simple future and that is because the future perfect literally just copies the ending that you would have for verbs in the simple future for the verb a so it's really not
[on-screen 03:15:02] The Future Perfect In Spanish: (conjugation of “haber” > will have) habré + [pa] | habremos + [pa] habras + [pa] | habréis + [pa] habra + [pa] | habran + [pal]
[03:15:03] that difficult to memorize as always try not focusing on these conjugations
[on-screen 03:15:06] The Future Perfect In Spanish: (conjugation of “haber” > will have) habré + [pa] | habrFemos# [pa] habras + [pa] ‘habraié + [pa] habra + [pa] | habran‘’ [pal]
[03:15:07] because they're the least used ones in conversation in Spanish a way that the future perfect can be used effectively is by using it with time expressions
[on-screen 03:15:13] The future perfect with time expressions:
[03:15:14] like para and D which mean by and within
[on-screen 03:15:15] The future perfect with time expressions: e “Para” + [time expression] > “By” ¢ “Dentro de” + [time expression] > “Within”
[03:15:17] and then any time expression that you want these constructions can help us talk about what will have happened at some point in the future saying
[on-screen 03:15:24] Para el lunes, yo habré terminado mis tareas
[on-screen 03:15:28] Para el lunes, yo habré terminado mis tareas By Monday, | will have finished my tasks
[03:15:29] finished my tasks with El Lunes being
[on-screen 03:15:31] Para [el lunes], yo habré terminado mis tareas By [Monday], | will have finished my tasks
[03:15:31] the time expression AB signifying the words we'll have for y and terminado being the participle similarly I can
[on-screen 03:15:38] Dentro de un ano, tu habras dejado tu trabajo
[on-screen 03:15:42] Dentro de un ano, tu habras dejado tu trabajo Within a year, you will have left your job
[03:15:43] will have left your job using un as a
[on-screen 03:15:45] Dentro de [un ano], tu habras dejado tu trabajo Within [a year], you will have left your job
[03:15:45] Time expression with the construction D additionally I can
[on-screen 03:15:49] Para esa fecha, John habra recibido muchas ofertas
[03:15:49] say Abra muchas which means by that date
[on-screen 03:15:54] Para esa fecha, John habra recibido muchas ofertas By that date, John will have received many offers
[03:15:54] John will have received many offers with esaa being the time expression as always
[on-screen 03:15:57] Para [esa fecha], John habra recibido muchas ofertas By [that date], John will have received many offers
[03:15:59] the same concept applies to any phrase that you want to say using the future perfect tense in Spanish even though I
[on-screen 03:16:04] The Future Perfect In Spanish: (conjugation of “haber” > will have) habré + [pa] | habremos + [pa] habras + [pa] | habréis + [pa] habra + [pa] | habran + [pa]
[03:16:04] did not present many examples in this video and only concentrated on the first three pronouns the future perfect tense is one of the least used ones in Spanish mainly because no one uses it in actual conversation as a matter of fact I did not present any sentences involving negatives reflexive verbs and object pronouns mostly because it's impossible to make a logical phrase using these ideas in the future perfect if anything the future perfect is a tense that is useful to know but not useful to utilize simply because it's used in rare cases when talking about actions that are guaranteed and completed by some point in the future both literally and conversationally the future perfect is not used very often if ever which is why it's useful to understand understand how it works but not so much to use the conditional tense in Spanish indicates