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Eranno

Eranno is a term primarily encountered in Italian-language texts as a nonstandard verb form rather than as a widely recognized independent word. In contemporary Italian, the future tense for the verb essere is conjugated as sarò, sarai, sarà, saremo, sarete, saranno. The sequence eranno does not appear among the standard forms and is not attested as a correct present or future tense in modern grammar. Consequently, eranno is generally considered an erroneous spelling or a typographical error when it appears in Italian prose or captions.

In some contexts eranno may appear as a proper noun in rare cases, though there are no

When encountering eranno in text, readers should verify the surrounding context. If the intended meaning is

widely
cited
persons,
places,
or
works
formally
named
Eranno
in
major
reference
sources.
The
form
could
also
be
found
in
dialectical
writings
or
historical
texts
where
orthography
differs
from
the
standard
language,
but
such
usages
are
not
part
of
the
normative
Italian
lexicon.
reference
to
a
future
action
by
they,
the
correct
form
is
saranno;
if
the
intended
meaning
is
past
imperfect,
it
is
erano.
The
term
thus
functions
mainly
as
a
note
on
orthography
and
tense
rather
than
as
a
standalone
lexical
item
with
a
defined
meaning.