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Futuro

Futuro is a word used in Spanish and Portuguese to denote the time after the present. As a noun, it refers to that period and appears in phrases such as en el futuro or o futuro. As an adjective, it means “relating to what will happen” and agrees in gender and number, for example cambios futuros in Spanish and soluções futuras in Portuguese; the masculine singular is futuro and the feminine is futura.

Etymology and linguistic use: Futuro derives from the Latin futurus, the participle of esse “to be,” meaning

Concepts and fields of study: The future encompasses the time yet to occur and is a central

Culture and practice: The future features prominently in science fiction, futurology, and futurism, where trajectories of

“about
to
be.”
It
has
cognates
in
other
Romance
languages,
such
as
Italian
futuro
and
French
futur.
In
grammar,
futuro
also
names
the
future
tense
in
those
languages
(futuro
do
indicativo
in
Portuguese,
futuro
simple
in
Spanish).
object
of
inquiry
in
philosophy,
cosmology,
and
the
social
sciences.
Debates
address
determinism
versus
indeterminism,
chances
and
probabilities,
and
how
current
actions
shape
long‑term
outcomes.
Forecasting
and
planning
use
models,
data,
and
scenarios
to
describe
possible
futures
in
areas
like
climate,
economics,
and
technology.
technology
and
society
are
imagined
and
analyzed.
In
everyday
use,
the
word
supports
discussions
of
upcoming
events,
planning,
and
expectations.
While
predictions
aim
to
estimate
what
will
happen,
they
remain
contingent
on
complex
and
evolving
factors.