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desidereranno

Desidereranno is the third-person plural form of the Italian verb desiderare in the futuro semplice, meaning “they will desire” or “they will wish.” It is a regular form built from the stem desiderer- plus the standard future endings: -ò, -ai, -à, -emo, -ete, -anno. The full conjugation of the verb in the future simple is: io desidererò, tu desidererai, lui/lei desidererà, noi desidereremo, voi desidererete, loro desidereranno.

In use, desidereranno expresses a future wish, intention, or preference involving actions or objects they want

Examples include: Domani desidereranno visitare una mostra al museo. Se avranno tempo, desidereranno partecipare all’evento. In

Etymology and related forms: desiderare derives from Latin desiderare, from desiderium meaning longing or want. The

to
obtain
or
experience.
It
denotes
a
simple,
forward-looking
desire
rather
than
a
strong
volition.
The
futuro
semplice
with
desiderare
is
common
in
narrative,
formal
writing,
and
contexts
where
a
neutral
statement
about
future
wishes
is
appropriate.
It
can
be
contrasted
with
verbs
like
volere,
which
convey
stronger
will,
or
with
desiderare
in
present
tense
when
referring
to
current
desires.
reported
speech
the
form
may
appear
in
sequences
of
tenses
consistent
with
the
surrounding
verb
forms.
verb
is
a
regular
-are
conjugation
verb
in
Italian,
and
desidereranno
is
one
of
the
standard
future
forms
used
to
indicate
future
wishes
or
intentions
by
multiple
subjects.