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Traeré

Traeré is the first-person singular form of the Spanish verb traer in the future simple tense (futuro simple). It means “I will bring.” The form is created by adding the regular future endings to the infinitive traer: -é, -ás, -á, -emos, -éis, -án. In this tense, traer behaves regularly across all persons, unlike some of its other tenses where the verb shows irregularities.

Usage and examples: Traeré is used to express a planned or expected action in the future. For

Conjugation (futuro simple, indicative): yo traeré, tú traerás, él/ella traerá, nosotros/nosotras traeremos, vosotros/vosotras traeréis, ellos/ellas traerán.

Related forms: Traer is irregular in several other tenses and moods (for example, present indicative traigo,

Overview: Traeré represents a straightforward future intention with traer, conveying the action of bringing something at

example:
Mañana
traeré
el
libro
a
clase.
(Tomorrow
I
will
bring
the
book
to
class.)
¿Qué
traerás
para
la
cena?
(What
will
you
bring
for
dinner?)
Translating
to
English,
it
corresponds
to
“I
will
bring.”
In
many
Spanish-speaking
regions,
especially
in
Latin
America,
the
form
with
ustedes
traerán
is
used
for
“you
all
will
bring.”
preterite
traje,
imperfect
traía,
present
subjunctive
traiga).
In
contrast,
the
futuro
simple
forms,
including
traeré,
are
regular
endings
attached
to
the
infinitive.
a
later
time.
Its
pronunciation
carries
an
accent
on
the
final
syllable,
as
with
other
future-tense
first-person
forms.