Home

Consoliderò

Consoliderò is the first-person singular future indicative form of the Italian verb consolidare. The verb means to make something more solid or stable, or to unite multiple elements into a single, stronger whole. The form consoliderò specifically indicates that the speaker will perform the action in the future, as in “Io consoliderò…,” meaning “I will consolidate.” The term is used in a variety of contexts, especially in business, finance, construction, and information management, where consolidation aims to improve durability, efficiency, or coherence.

Morphology and conjugation: consolidare is a regular -are verb. The future indicative first person singular is

Etymology and usage notes: The verb derives from Latin consolidare, itself from con- “together” and solidus “solid.”

formed
with
the
stem
consolid-
plus
the
ending
-erò,
yielding
consoliderò,
with
the
stress
on
the
last
syllable.
Other
tenses
follow
regular
patterns:
presente
consolid-o,
imperfetto
consolidavo,
passato
prossimo
ho
consolidato,
future
consoliderò.
The
accent
on
ò
marks
the
stressed
syllable
in
this
form.
In
Italian,
consoliderò
can
refer
to
financial
statements,
the
merger
or
strengthening
of
assets,
the
reinforcement
of
structures,
or
the
consolidation
of
data.
Examples
include:
“Domani
consoliderò
i
dati
nel
database”
and
“Se
otterrò
i
fondi,
consoliderò
la
posizione
finanziaria
dell’azienda.”
In
formal
contexts,
the
form
appears
in
plans,
forecasts,
and
operative
reports
to
express
planned
actions.