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Scriverete

Scriverete is the second person plural form of the Italian verb scrivere in the future simple tense. It means "you all will write" and is used to refer to a future action carried out by a group including the listener.

Scrivere is an -ere verb, and its future tense is formed on the stem scriver- by adding

Usage in Italian is straightforward: scriverete appears in statements about future plans, instructions, forecasts, or narratives

Etymology: scrivere derives from Latin scribere, meaning to write. The future tense in Italian attains the voi

Pronunciation follows standard Italian rules for stress and syllable structure; the word is pronounced with the

personal
endings:
-ò,
-ai,
-à,
-emo,
-ete,
-anno.
Consequently,
the
form
for
voi
is
scriverete.
It
is
distinct
from
other
tenses
such
as
scriverete
in
the
imperfect
or
conditional
forms
(for
example,
scrivereste
is
the
conditional,
meaning
"you
all
would
write").
involving
multiple
people.
It
can
also
occur
in
dialogues,
reports,
or
quoted
speech.
For
example:
"Domani
scriverete
le
vostre
note"
or
"Se
voi
scriverete
al
responsabile,
otterrete
una
risposta."
In
negative
or
interrogative
sentences,
it
follows
the
usual
word
order
of
Italian
questions
or
negations.
ending
-ete,
yielding
scriverete
for
you
all.
stress
placed
according
to
ordinary
Italian
stress
patterns.
Scriverete
is
a
common
and
regular
form
in
written
and
spoken
Italian.