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proclamar Future Conjugation

proclamarto proclaim

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Quick answer:

The future tense of proclamar (proclamaré, proclamarás, etc.) indicates actions that will happen.

proclamar Future Forms

yoproclamaré
proclamarás
él/ella/ustedproclamará
nosotrosproclamaremos
vosotrosproclamaréis
ellos/ellas/ustedesproclamarán

When to Use the Future

Use the future tense of proclamar to talk about something that will definitely happen in the future. It can also express probability or conjecture about a present situation, like 'He's probably proclaiming his innocence right now.'

Notes on proclamar in the Future

Proclamar is regular in the future tense. The stem is the full infinitive 'proclamar'.

Example Sentences

  • Mañana, el presidente proclamará nuevas medidas.

    Tomorrow, the president will proclaim new measures.

    él/ella/usted

  • Nosotros proclamaremos la verdad sin miedo.

    We will proclaim the truth without fear.

    nosotros

  • ¿Tú proclamarás tus intenciones claramente?

    Will you proclaim your intentions clearly?

  • Ellos proclamarán los ganadores al final del evento.

    They will proclaim the winners at the end of the event.

    ellos/ellas/ustedes

Common Mistakes

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

    Correct: Use 'proclamará' instead of 'proclama' for a future event.

    Why: The present tense describes current actions, while the future tense is specifically for actions that will occur later.

  • Mistake: Confusing the future with the conditional.

    Correct: Use 'proclamará' for a definite future event, and 'proclamaría' for a hypothetical 'would proclaim'.

    Why: The future tense states a future certainty, while the conditional expresses hypothetical or conditional outcomes.

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Related Tenses