Future Tense in Czech
Budoucí Čas
Overview
Czech forms the future tense in two fundamentally different ways depending on verbal aspect, making this topic a direct extension of the perfective/imperfective distinction. At the CEFR B1 level, mastering both future constructions is essential for discussing plans, predictions, and intentions.
For perfective verbs, the future is expressed simply by using the present-tense conjugation — a perfective verb's present form inherently refers to a completed future action. For imperfective verbs, Czech uses the auxiliary budu (I will be) plus the infinitive, similar to English "will be doing." The verb být has its own future: budu, budeš, bude, budeme, budete, budou.
This dual system means learners must always consider aspect when forming the future. Napíšu dopis (I will write and finish a letter) differs meaningfully from Budu psát dopis (I will be writing a letter).
How It Works
Imperfective Future: budu + Infinitive
| Person | Form | Translation |
|---|---|---|
| já | budu psát | I will write/be writing |
| ty | budeš psát | you will write |
| on/a/o | bude psát | he/she will write |
| my | budeme psát | we will write |
| vy | budete psát | you (pl.) will write |
| oni | budou psát | they will write |
Perfective Future: Present Form = Future
| Infinitive (perf.) | já | ty | on/a/o | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| napsat | napíšu | napíšeš | napíše | will write (finish) |
| přijít | přijdu | přijdeš | přijde | will arrive |
| udělat | udělám | uděláš | udělá | will do/make |
| koupit | koupím | koupíš | koupí | will buy |
Future of být
Budu, budeš, bude, budeme, budete, budou — functions both as standalone "will be" and as the imperfective future auxiliary.
Examples in Context
| Czech | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Napíšu dopis. | I will write a letter (and finish). | perfective |
| Budu psát dopis. | I will be writing a letter. | imperfective |
| Co budeš dělat? | What will you be doing? | imperfective |
| Přijdu v pět. | I will come at five. | perfective |
| Budeme čekat. | We will wait. | imperfective |
| Koupím to zítra. | I'll buy it tomorrow. | perfective |
| Bude pršet. | It will rain. | imperfective |
| Budete tam? | Will you be there? | být future |
| Až přijdeš, zavolej. | When you arrive, call. | perfective in temporal clause |
| Budu se učit celý den. | I'll be studying all day. | imperfective, duration |
Common Mistakes
Using budu with perfective verbs
- Wrong: Budu napsat dopis.
- Right: Napíšu dopis.
- Why: Perfective verbs form their future with the present conjugation alone. Adding budu is ungrammatical.
Using perfective for ongoing future
- Wrong: Napíšu celý den. (meaning "I'll be writing all day")
- Right: Budu psát celý den.
- Why: Perfective implies completion. Ongoing future requires the imperfective construction.
Forgetting aspect pairs
- Wrong: Using imperfective when a single completed action is meant
- Right: Match aspect to intended meaning
- Why: Přečtu tu knihu (I'll read through) vs. Budu číst tu knihu (I'll be reading) express different things.
Usage Notes
In spoken Czech, perfective present-as-future is extremely common for plans: Zajdu do obchodu (I'll pop into the shop), Zavolám ti (I'll call you). The imperfective budu + infinitive emphasizes duration or process.
Common Future Expressions
| Czech | English | Type |
|---|---|---|
| Zítra budu pracovat. | Tomorrow I'll be working. | imperfective |
| Hned to udělám. | I'll do it right away. | perfective |
| Co budete dělat o víkendu? | What will you do this weekend? | imperfective question |
| Přijdu, jakmile budu moct. | I'll come as soon as I can. | perfective + imperfective |
| Nebude to trvat dlouho. | It won't take long. | imperfective negative |
| Uvidíme se zítra. | We'll see each other tomorrow. | perfective |
The perfective future is overwhelmingly common in everyday Czech for specific, bounded future actions. The imperfective budu + infinitive is used when duration, process, or ongoing state matters. Native speakers switch between the two unconsciously, and developing this instinct is a key B1 milestone.
Až vs. Když for Future Events
Czech distinguishes between když (when — habitual or past) and až (when — future single events):
- Až přijdu domů, zavolám. (When I get home, I'll call.)
- Když přijdu domů, vždy si uvařím čaj. (When I get home, I always make tea.)
Using až for future reference and když for habitual/past reference is a key pattern.
Practice Tips
- Take five common aspect pairs (psát/napsat, dělat/udělat, číst/přečíst) and write both future forms, noting meaning differences.
- Describe tomorrow using both forms: perfective for completions, imperfective for ongoing activities.
- Listen for budu/budeš/bude in Czech — it signals imperfective future or the future of být.
Related Concepts
- Prerequisite: Verbal Aspect — builds the foundation for future tense
前提概念
Verbal AspectA2その他のB1の概念
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