Home

arriveremmo

Arriveremmo is the first-person plural form of the Italian verb arrivare in the condizionale presente, meaning “we would arrive.” It is used to express actions or outcomes that would occur under certain conditions, as well as polite or tentative statements about future events.

Morphology and usage: In Italian, the condizionale presente uses endings such as -ei, -esti, -ebbe, -emmo, -este,

Examples: Se decidessimo di partire ora, arriveremmo prima di sera. (If we decided to leave now, we

Notes: Arriveremmo does not itself indicate past time; the conditional mood describes potential outcomes. For events

-ebbero.
For
arrivare,
the
noi
form
is
arrivemmo
or
arriveremmo
in
common
spelling,
depending
on
the
analysis
of
the
stem,
and
it
conveys
the
same
conditional
meaning:
we
would
arrive.
This
form
uses
the
same
stem
as
the
future
tense
and
is
employed
to
discuss
hypothetical
scenarios
or
actions
that
depend
on
a
condition.
would
arrive
before
evening.)
Se
avessimo
tempo,
arriveremmo
in
città
per
pranzo.
(If
we
had
time,
we
would
arrive
in
the
city
by
lunch.)
In
these
sentences,
the
condition
is
expressed
in
a
different
mood
or
tense,
while
arriveremmo
states
the
hypothetical
outcome
in
the
main
clause.
that
did
not
happen
in
the
past,
Italian
uses
the
condizionale
passato
(e.g.,
saremmo
arrivati).
Arriveremmo
appears
in
both
spoken
and
written
Italian
as
part
of
standard
verb
conjugation.