Inklingo

How to Say "i'll give" in Spanish

The Spanish word fori'll giveis daréA2 level. This is a very common word in everyday Spanish.

English → SpanishA2

daré

VerbA2
Contraction, common in spoken English.
A cheerful young person extending a brightly wrapped red gift box toward an outstretched hand, symbolizing the future action of 'I will give'.

Examples

Mañana te daré el libro.

Tomorrow I will give you the book.

Le daré una respuesta la próxima semana.

I will give him/her an answer next week.

Si gano la lotería, te daré la mitad.

If I win the lottery, I will give you half.

Talking About the Future

'Daré' is how you say 'I will give'. It's part of the 'future tense', used for things that haven't happened yet. The accent on the 'é' is the key clue that tells you it's about the future and it's 'I' who will do the action.

How to Form the Future Tense

For many verbs, you just take the full, original verb (like 'hablar', 'comer', or 'dar') and add a special future ending. For 'I', that ending is '-é'. So, dar + é = daré.

'Voy a dar' vs. 'Daré'

Mistake:Using 'daré' for immediate plans, which can sound a bit formal.

Correction: For near-future plans, it's more common to say 'voy a dar'. For example, 'Voy a darte el libro ahora' (I'm going to give you the book now). Use 'daré' for promises, predictions, or more distant events: 'Te daré una respuesta mañana' (I'll give you an answer tomorrow).

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