â„–16286031[Quote]
I will* be raped tomorrow
The sentence "I was raped tomorrow" is grammatically incorrect because it pairs the past tense verb "was" with the future time marker "tomorrow." To express a future event, you must use the future tense structure will be + past participle, resulting in "I will be raped tomorrow."
Key grammatical distinctions:
Past Tense: "I was raped" refers to an event that has already occurred.
Future Tense: "I will be raped" refers to an event expected to occur in the future.
Passive Voice: Both forms use the passive voice (be + past participle), which is appropriate when the subject receives the action.
Thank me, the eflGOD
â„–16286067[Quote]
>>16286031erm actually there is a concept called the "prophetic perfect tense" whereby you describe future events using past tense verbs because the outcome is guaranteed