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attireront

Attireront is the third-person plural form of the French verb attirer in the futur simple, meaning “they will attract.” It is used with a plural subject (ils, elles, or a plural noun) to express a future action of drawing attention or pulling someone or something toward a target. For regular -er verbs, the futur simple endings are added to the infinitive, yielding forms such as j’attirerai, tu attireras, il attirera, nous attirerons, vous attirerez, ils attireront.

Etymology and meaning: Attirer comes from Old French atirer, itself from Latin ad- plus tirare (to pull).

Usage: Attireront is common in formal, written, or planning contexts, such as forecasts, marketing plans, or

Examples: Les campagnes publicitaires attireront l’attention des consommateurs. Les mesures économiques attireront des investissements étrangers. These

See also: attirer, futur simple, concordance des temps.

The
sense
evolved
from
“to
draw
toward”
physically
or
metaphorically
to
“to
attract”
in
social,
commercial,
or
cultural
contexts.
The
form
attireront
thus
carries
the
same
semantic
field
of
future
attraction.
policy
discussions.
It
governs
a
direct
object
in
sentences
like
attirer
des
clients
or
attirer
l’attention.
In
everyday
spoken
French,
speakers
may
prefer
the
near-future
construction
aller
+
infinitive
(vont
attirer)
to
convey
immediacy.
constructions
illustrate
how
the
verb
conveys
that
future
attraction
will
occur
with
a
plural
subject.