본문 바로가기

My Interests/English

Is phrase “will you be needing …” correct?

Will you be needing [...] ?

It seems gramatically correct; I am also fine with "need" used in continuous time. But I'm wondering if it is used in spoken language...

For example, I want to take a shower (which might take a while) so I ask my roommate if he is fine with that:

Will you be needing the bathroom?

Is this the proper way to do it? Or would native speaker come up with something easier?

shareimprove this question
2 
That's perfectly acceptable and common usage, to me. –  Kristina Lopez Sep 7 '13 at 14:21

Will you need... and Will you be needing... differ in that the second of these is a less direct and hence more polite way to phrase the question.

Swan in Practical English Usage (p196) explains it well:

The tense can be used to make polite enquiries about people's plans. (By using the future progressive to ask 'What have you already decided?', the speaker shows that he/she does not want to influence the listener's intentions.)

Compare:

'Will you be staying in this evening?' (very polite enquiry suggesting I simply want to know your plans')

'Are you going to stay in this evening?' (pressing for a decision).

This usage is possible with verbs that do not normally have progressive forms.

Will you be wanting lunch tomorrow?

Need is another of the verbs that are not normally used in the progressive form, but can be in contexts such as those exemplified above.

shareimprove this answer
   
+1 Excellent explanation. –  TrevorD Sep 7 '13 at 15:05
   
Indeed. I'd just add that 'verbs that are not normally used in the progressive form, but can be in contexts such as those exemplified above' when used this way are one type of hedge (mitigating strategem). – Edwin Ashworth Sep 7 '13 at 15:54




http://english.stackexchange.com/questions/125800/is-phrase-will-you-be-needing-correct