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Afirman

Afirman is the present indicative, third-person plural form of the Spanish verb afirmar. It translates as “they affirm” or “you (plural) affirm.” The verb afirmar means to state, declare, or assert something as true. It is a regular -ar verb of Latin origin, derived from Latin affirmare, meaning to confirm or uphold. The conjugation follows the standard -ar pattern: yo afirmo, tú afirmas, él afirma, nosotros afirmamos, vosotros afirmáis, ellos/ellas afirman. The form afirman is used whenever the subject is plural, including ustedes in many dialects.

Usage of afirman appears across discourse, journalism, and literature to attribute a claim or assertion to

Etymology traces afirmar to Latin affirmāre, from which English and other Romance languages derive related forms

a
group
or
to
maintain
formality
in
reported
speech.
For
example,
“Los
científicos
afirman
que
los
resultados
son
concluyentes”
or
“Los
testigos
afirman
haber
visto
al
sospechoso.”
The
term
can
also
appear
in
direct
speech
as
a
simple
present
tense
statement,
depending
on
the
subject.
such
as
affirm.
In
Spanish,
afirman
sits
within
a
broader
family
of
verbs
related
to
asserting
or
confirming
statements.