Modal verbs
Will and
would for habitual behavior
Will
Will can be used to talk about people's habitual
actions or their characteristic behavior.
- He will spend hours at a time on the Internet.
(= He habitually spends hours at a time on the Internet.)
- They will spend hours on the beach every summer.
- Tom won't get home before sunrise on the weekends.
Will can be used in the contracted form.
- He'll talk to himself for hours.
Will can be stressed (emphasized) in a
sentence. This expresses criticism of a habitual action or characteristic.
- She will arrive late for dinner parties.
- He will wear those awful sweaters.
Would
Would is used to talk about people's habitual
actions or their characteristic behavior in the past.
- My mother would get really quiet when she was
angry.
- We'd stay up late talking about politics,
but we wouldn't actually do anything.
Other ways of talking about habitual behavior
Be in the habit of + -ing
and the adverbs habitually, always,
usually and regularly
can also be used to talk about habitual actions and characteristics.
- On my day off I am in the habit of spending
all morning in bed.
- She habitually watches six hours of TV a day.
- On a good day I usually get to work at nine.
- Some dogs regularly bark for no reason.