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capiranno

Capiranno is the third-person plural form of the Italian verb capire in the futuro semplice, meaning it translates to "they will understand" in English. It is a grammatical form, not a proper noun, and appears in ordinary Italian sentences to describe a future understanding by a group.

Capire, the base verb, means "to understand." It is an -ire verb and is derived from Latin

In usage, capiranno is employed anywhere the subject is plural and the action is to understand in

Notes and related forms: capirà is the feminine? No, capirà is third-person singular. Other related forms include

See also: capire; Italian verbs; futuro semplice.

capere,
meaning
to
take
or
grasp.
In
Italian,
capire
forms
a
standard
regular
pattern
in
the
future
tense,
with
the
endings
-ò,
-ai,
-à,
-emo,
-ete,
-anno.
Accordingly,
the
future
forms
are
capirò,
capirai,
capirà,
capiremo,
capirete,
capiranno.
the
future.
It
can
appear
in
factual
statements,
conditional
clauses,
or
reported
speech.
For
example:
"Se
ascolteranno
attentamente,
capiranno
il
problema."
or
"Capiranno
la
lezione
domani."
The
form
helps
convey
anticipation
or
prediction
about
comprehension
by
a
group.
capirò
(I
will
understand),
capirai
(you
will
understand),
capiremo
(we
will
understand),
and
capirete
(you
all
will
understand).
Capire
remains
a
common
verb
in
everyday
Italian,
with
capiranno
one
of
its
most
frequently
used
future
forms.