#english_language ## Will - To indicate that we think a present or future situation is **CERTAIN**: > We won't see them again before Christmas - to talk about characteristic behaviour or habits in the present, although usually we mean to convey negative emotion > Every day Dan will come home from work and turn on the TV ## Would - To talk about *general* or *repeated* [[Future Continuous#^51bf46|willingness]] in the past we can sometimes use would, but we can't use it in this way to talk about a *particular* occasion: > Whenever I had to go town, Ron would give me a lift - To criticise people's characteristic behaviour or habits in the past with the stress on "would" to suggest that what happened was predictable because it was typical of a person's behaviour: > Jackie says she can't help because she's got a lot of work on. - Well she *would* say that - she always uses that excuse. - we use **would not** to talk about *either* unwillingness in general or about a particular occasion: > We thought that people wouldn't/would buy the book (=general) > She wouldn't say what was wrong when I asked (=particular occasion)