: For scheduled events (e.g., "The train arrives at 6:30").
: Chapter 11 of Charting the Course argues that technology is opportunity , not destiny; our choices determine its direction [14].
In English linguistics, expressing the future involves specific structures based on the nature of the event [10]: 11 : Future
: For personal plans/arrangements (e.g., "I'm meeting them tomorrow").
: Protecting cities from climate change, disasters, and conflicts [11]. 2. Faith and Hope: Jeremiah 29:11 : For scheduled events (e
: Technologies like self-driving cars are predicted to go mainstream within 3–5 years, significantly reducing traffic fatalities [15]. 4. Grammar: Talking About the Future
In many spiritual contexts, the "11" is synonymous with Jeremiah 29:11 , a widely cited verse regarding divine intent: "For I know the plans I have for you... plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future" [19]. This text is often used to frame the future as a deliberate creation rather than an accident [2]. : Protecting cities from climate change, disasters, and
United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 11 focuses on making cities "inclusive, safe, resilient, and sustainable" [18]. As over half the world’s population lives in urban areas—a figure expected to reach 70% by 2050—cities represent the definitive future of global living [11, 18]. Key challenges include: