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fusionar Future Conjugation

fusionarto merge

B1regular -ar★★★
Quick answer:

The future tense of fusionar (fusionaré, fusionarás, fusionará, fusionaremos, fusionaréis, fusionarán) talks about future merging.

fusionar Future Forms

yofusionaré
fusionarás
él/ella/ustedfusionará
nosotrosfusionaremos
vosotrosfusionaréis
ellos/ellas/ustedesfusionarán

When to Use the Future

Use the future tense to talk about actions of merging that will definitely happen in the future. It can also express probability or conjecture about the present. For example, 'Fusionaremos las dos compañías el próximo mes' (We will merge the two companies next month) or 'Eso fusionará bien con tu estrategia' (That will merge well with your strategy - expressing probability).

Notes on fusionar in the Future

Fusionar is regular in the future tense. The stem is the entire infinitive 'fusionar', and you add the standard future endings.

Example Sentences

  • Yo fusionaré todos los documentos en un solo archivo.

    I will merge all the documents into a single file.

    yo

  • ¿Fusionarás tu cuenta con la mía?

    Will you merge your account with mine?

  • El comité fusionará las propuestas.

    The committee will merge the proposals.

    él/ella/usted

  • Nosotros fusionaremos nuestros recursos para el proyecto.

    We will merge our resources for the project.

    nosotros

  • Ellos fusionarán sus departamentos pronto.

    They will merge their departments soon.

    ellos/ellas/ustedes

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: Using the present tense instead of the future for a future action.

    Correct: Use the future tense: 'Fusionaremos la empresa' (We will merge the company).

    Why: While Spanish sometimes uses the present for future, the dedicated future tense is clearer and often required.

  • Mistake: Confusing the future tense with the periphrastic future ('ir a' + infinitive).

    Correct: Both 'fusionaremos' and 'vamos a fusionar' mean 'we will merge', but the simple future often sounds more formal or definitive.

    Why: The 'ir a' + infinitive structure is very common, especially in spoken Spanish, but the simple future is also important to master.

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