The prime minister will meet the employees this evening is a sentence of Future Indefinite Tense.
Active Voice Formula: Subject + Will/Shall + Verb (Ist form) + Object + (.)
Passive Voice Formula: Convert Object to Subject + Will/Shall + Be + Verb (3rd form) + By + Convert Subject to Object + Remaining + (.)
Does she not invite the guests belongs to Present Indefinite Tense.
We use helping verb does for he, she, it & singular names in Present Tense.
We also use first form (invite) after do/does in Present Tense.
AGM 24-12-2022
The given sentence contains one of Model verb (Model Verb = will, shall, can, may, might, could, might, must, would). It is in active voice.
Rule : Subject + Model verb + be + V3 + Optional Objects.
"He called me last night."
اس نے مجھے کل رات بلایا۔
"He" is the subject pronoun (the one doing the action).
"Me" is the object pronoun (the one receiving the action).
I was reading a novel when they came to see me.
This is a case of a past continuous action interrupted by a simple past action:
"I was reading a novel" → Past continuous (ongoing action)
"They came to see me" → Simple past (interrupting event)
This is a common structure in English: Past Continuous + when + Simple Past
Sarah will have hosted her show by the evening.
Future perfect tense uses "will have" + past participle.
It indicates the action will be completed before a specific future time.
This sentence belongs to Future Perfect Tense.
I'll have finished means I will have finished.
This sentence belongs to Past Perfect Continuous Tense.
Formula: Subject + had + not + been + verb (ing) + object + since/for + time
He has not been eating meat for three years means وہ تین سالوں سے گوشت نہیں کھارہا
I have been helping him for many years.
میں کئی سالوں سے اس کی مدد کر رہا ہوں۔
The sentence uses "for many years", which indicates an action that started in the past and is still continuing.
For such cases, we use the present perfect continuous tense:
Subject+have/hasbeen+verb−ing
The sentence "They will have been writing their letters" is in the Future Perfect Continuous tense, which is used to describe an action that will be in progress at a specific point in the future and will have started before that point.