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cherchera

Cherchera is a grammatical form found in Modern French. It is the third-person singular simple future tense of the verb chercher, meaning to search or to look for. In standard sentences, it appears as part of a clause with an explicit subject, for example: il cherchera un emploi (he will look for a job). As a verb form, cherchera is an inflected variant rather than a separate dictionary entry.

Formation and usage: The future simple endings for -er verbs are added to the stem cherch-: je

Etymology: The verb chercher derives from Old French cherchier, itself from Latin circare, meaning to go about

Notes: Cherchera is primarily a syntactic or grammatical reference rather than a separate lexical entry. Its

chercherai,
tu
chercheras,
il/elle
cherchera,
nous
chercherons,
vous
chercherez,
ils/elles
chercheront.
Therefore,
cherchera
corresponds
to
the
il/elle/on
form.
Because
it
is
an
inflected
form,
cherchera
typically
appears
within
a
larger
sentence
and
is
not
listed
as
a
standalone
lemma
in
most
dictionaries.
The
verb
chercher
has
other
tenses
and
moods,
such
as
cherche,
cherches,
cherchons
(present),
cherchait
(imperfect),
and
chercherai
(first-person
future).
or
to
roam,
reflecting
the
historical
sense
of
seeking
or
going
in
search
of
something.
The
future
form
cherchera
mirrors
the
regular
-er
verb
conjugation
pattern
in
French.
use
is
governed
by
standard
French
conjugation
rules,
and
it
coexists
with
other
future
forms,
including
the
near
future
construction
aller
+
infinitive,
which
is
common
in
everyday
speech.
See
also
chercher
and
related
conjugations.