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alarmar Future Conjugation

alarmarto alarm

B1regular -ar★★★
Quick answer:

The future tense of alarmar (alarmaré, alarmarás, etc.) indicates actions that will happen or expresses probability.

alarmar Future Forms

yoalarmaré
alarmarás
él/ella/ustedalarmará
nosotrosalarmaremos
vosotrosalarmaréis
ellos/ellas/ustedesalarmarán

When to Use the Future

Use the future tense to talk about something that will definitely happen later, or to express a strong probability or assumption about the present or future. For example, 'The alarm will sound at midnight,' or 'He will probably be alarmed by the news.'

Notes on alarmar in the Future

Alarmar is regular in the future tense. The stem is the full infinitive 'alarmar', and the standard future endings are added.

Example Sentences

  • La sirena alarmará a las seis en punto.

    The siren will sound at six o'clock sharp.

    él/ella/usted

  • No te alarmes, todo saldrá bien.

    Don't worry (lit: don't alarm yourself), everything will be fine.

  • Mañana alarmaremos a la prensa sobre el evento.

    Tomorrow we will alert the press about the event.

    nosotros

  • Ellos se alarmarán si no llegamos a tiempo.

    They will get alarmed if we don't arrive on time.

    ellos/ellas/ustedes

  • Yo te alarmaré si hay algún problema.

    I will alert you if there is any problem.

    yo

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: Using the present tense instead of future, e.g., 'La sirena alarma a las seis'.

    Correct: Use the future tense: 'La sirena alarmará a las seis'.

    Why: The future tense specifically indicates an action that will occur in the future.

  • Mistake: Confusing the future with the 'ir a + infinitive' construction.

    Correct: Both 'alarmará' and 'va a alarmar' are possible, but the simple future is often more direct for predictions.

    Why: 'Ir a + infinitive' often implies more certainty or immediate future, while the simple future can express probability or more distant future.

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