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chiamer

Chiamer is the stem used in Italian to conjugate the verb chiamare, which means to call or to name. It is not an independent infinitive; the standard infinitive is chiamare. The form chiamer- appears in the conjugation of the simple future and the conditional, among other derived forms.

In the future tense, the stem chiamer- combines with endings to produce: creerò? No—correct forms are: chiamerò,

Chiamer- also appears as the basis for related moods in some tense developments, but the main, productive

Etymology and classification: chiamare derives from Latin clamare, meaning to shout or call. The modern Italian

See also: Italian grammar, Chiamare, Verb conjugation.

chiamerai,
chiamerà,
chiameremo,
chiamerete,
chiameranno.
In
the
conditional,
the
corresponding
forms
are:
chiamerei,
chiameresti,
chiamerebbe,
chiameremmo,
chiamereste,
chiamerebbero.
For
example:
Domani
chiamerò
Luca.
Se
avessi
tempo,
chiamerei
tua
madre.
use
in
standard
Italian
is
for
future
and
conditional
forms
of
chiamare.
Other
tenses
use
different
stems
or
endings
derived
from
the
same
verb,
such
as
chiam-
for
the
present
and
imperfect
in
the
present
tense
system
(io
chiamo,
tu
chiami,
lui
chiama,
etc.),
or
chiam-
with
past
participles
in
compound
tenses
(avere
chiamato).
stem
chiamer-
reflects
regular
inflection
patterns
for
-are
verbs
in
the
formation
of
the
future
and
the
conditional,
with
phonological
adaptations
typical
of
Italian
phonotactics.