Inklingo
A child with a small bandage on their knee sitting on a bench.

lesionar Future Conjugation

lesionarto injure

B1regular -ar★★★★
Quick answer:

The future tense of lesionar (lesionaré, lesionarás, etc.) talks about future injuries or probabilities.

lesionar Future Forms

yolesionaré
lesionarás
él/ella/ustedlesionará
nosotroslesionaremos
vosotroslesionaréis
ellos/ellas/ustedeslesionarán

When to Use the Future

Use the future tense of lesionar to talk about injuries that will happen, or to express a probability or assumption about an injury. For example, 'Si sigues así, te lesionarás.' (If you continue like this, you will injure yourself).

Notes on lesionar in the Future

Lesionar is a regular -ar verb. The future tense is formed by adding the future endings (-é, -ás, -á, -emos, -éis, -án) to the infinitive 'lesionar'.

Example Sentences

  • Me lesionaré si no me cuido.

    I will injure myself if I don't take care of myself.

    yo

  • Probablemente te lesionarás en ese salto.

    You will probably injure yourself on that jump.

  • El corredor se lesionará si corre la maratón sin entrenar.

    The runner will injure himself if he runs the marathon without training.

    él/ella/usted

  • Si no cambian las condiciones, se lesionarán más deportistas.

    If the conditions don't change, more athletes will get injured.

    ellos/ellas/ustedes

Common Mistakes

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

    Correct: For a definite future event, use the future tense: 'Me lesiono mañana' is incorrect; it should be 'Me lesionaré mañana'.

    Why: The future tense specifically denotes actions that will occur in the future.

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Related Tenses