Inklingo
A gentle breeze blowing a cluster of fluffy white dandelion seeds away into the clear blue sky.

disipar Future Conjugation

disiparto scatter

B1regular -ar★★★★
Quick answer:

The future tense 'disiparé', 'disiparás' indicates actions that will happen, like 'the fog will dissipate'.

disipar Future Forms

yodisiparé
disiparás
él/ella/usteddisipará
nosotrosdisiparemos
vosotrosdisiparéis
ellos/ellas/ustedesdisiparán

When to Use the Future

Use the future tense to talk about actions involving 'disipar' that are certain to happen in the future. It can also express probability or conjecture about the present. For example, 'The rain will dissipate the heat' or 'He will probably dissipate his anger soon'.

Notes on disipar in the Future

'Disipar' is regular in the future tense. The stem is the infinitive 'disipar', and the standard future endings (-é, -ás, -á, -emos, -éis, -án) are added.

Example Sentences

  • El sol disipará las nubes mañana.

    The sun will dissipate the clouds tomorrow.

    él/ella/usted

  • Espero que disipes tus dudas con esta explicación.

    I hope you dissipate your doubts with this explanation.

  • Pronto disiparemos la incertidumbre.

    Soon we will dissipate the uncertainty.

    nosotros

  • El viento disipará el humo del incendio.

    The wind will dissipate the smoke from the fire.

    él/ella/usted

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: Using the present tense instead of the future.

    Correct: For actions that *will* happen, use the future tense: 'disipará'.

    Why: The present tense refers to current actions, while the future tense specifically denotes events yet to occur.

  • Mistake: Forgetting the accent on future tense endings.

    Correct: All future tense endings require an accent: 'disiparé', 'disiparás', 'disipará', etc.

    Why: The accent mark indicates the stressed syllable.

Master Spanish verbs in context

Memorizing tables only gets you so far. Read 200+ illustrated and narrated Spanish stories to see verbs like 'disipar' used naturally — in the tenses you're learning.

Related Tenses