What is the different between the following:

1) You will have been winning the match.
2) You will have winning the the match.

And
1) I will be at the airport.
2) I will at the airport.

#2 is incorrect. "been" is needed, as in #1.

The second #2 is also incorrect ... the main verb "be" is missing.

Thanks. Can you name the tenses Please.

This is one of several very good websites that can help you learn English.

http://www.englishclub.com/learn-english.htm

For verbs, click on Grammar, then on Verbs (not Phrasal Verbs or others), and you will find all the tenses given, plus examples.

http://www.englishclub.com/grammar/verbs.htm
See where it says Tenses? And under that are the present, past, and future tenses and variations:

Present tenses Simple, Continuous, Perfect, Perfect Continuous
Past tenses Simple, Continuous, Perfect, Perfect Continuous
Future tenses Simple, Continuous, Perfect, Perfect Continuous


Click on the links for specific examples.

The correct versions of the sentences are as follows:

1) You will have been winning the match.
2) You will have won the match.

In sentence 1, "You will have been winning the match," it is in the future perfect continuous tense. This indicates an action that will be ongoing in the future until a specific point in time. To form this tense, you use the auxiliary verb "will have been" followed by the verb in the present participle form, which in this case is "winning." Therefore, this sentence implies that at some point in the future, you will have been continuously winning the match until that specific point.

However, in sentence 2, "You will have winning the match," the second part of the sentence is incorrect. It should be "You will have won the match." Here, "won" is the correct past participle form of the verb "win" to indicate a completed action in the future perfect tense. So, this sentence conveys that at some point in the future, you will have achieved victory in the match.

Regarding the second set of sentences:

1) I will be at the airport.
2) I will at the airport.

In sentence 1, "I will be at the airport," it is in the future continuous tense. This indicates an action that will be happening in the future at a specific time or for a particular duration. To form this tense, you use the auxiliary verb "will be" followed by the verb in the present participle form, which in this case is "be." Therefore, this sentence implies that in the future, you will be at the airport during a specific period.

However, in sentence 2, "I will at the airport," it is incorrect. The correct version should be "I will be at the airport." You need to use the verb "be" in its present participle form ("be") to create the future continuous tense correctly.