Inklingo
A person holding a red leash, walking a happy brown dog along a green park path.

pasear Future Conjugation

pasearto walk (a pet)

A1regular -ar★★★★★
Quick answer:

Actions that will happen, like 'pasearé' (I will walk).

pasear Future Forms

yopasearé
pasearás
él/ella/ustedpaseará
nosotrospasearemos
vosotrospasearéis
ellos/ellas/ustedespasearán

When to Use the Future

Use the future tense to talk about actions that will definitely happen in the future. You can also use it to express probability or conjecture about the present, like 'Paseará por aquí cerca.' (He's probably walking around nearby).

Notes on pasear in the Future

Pasear is regular in the future tense. The stem is the full infinitive 'pasear' and the endings are standard.

Example Sentences

  • Mañana pasearé a mi perro en el parque.

    Tomorrow I will walk my dog in the park.

    yo

  • ¿Pasearás con nosotros?

    Will you walk with us?

  • Ellos pasearán por la playa al atardecer.

    They will walk along the beach at sunset.

    ellos/ellas/ustedes

  • Usted paseará solo si no llueve.

    You will walk alone if it doesn't rain.

Common Mistakes

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

    Correct: Use 'pasearemos' for 'we will walk', not 'paseamos'.

    Why: The present tense describes current actions, while the future tense describes actions yet to come.

  • Mistake: Confusing future and conditional endings.

    Correct: Future endings are -é, -ás, -á, -emos, -éis, -án. Conditional endings are -ía, -ías, -ía, -íamos, -íais, -ían.

    Why: These endings sound similar but have distinct meanings and uses.

Master Spanish verbs in context

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

Related Tenses