Home

dormiranno

Dormiranno is the third-person plural form of the Italian verb dormire in the simple future (futuro semplice). It translates to “they will sleep” in English and is used to describe an action that will take place in the future by multiple subjects. Like other -ire verbs, dormire follows a regular futuro semplice pattern, with the forms: io dormirò, tu dormirai, lui/lei dormirà, noi dormiremo, voi dormirete, loro dormiranno.

The form dormiranno specifically denotes that a group of people will perform the action of sleeping. It

Etymology and related forms: Dormire originates from Latin dormīre, related to cognate verbs in other Romance

See also: dormire; sonno; dormito.

commonly
appears
in
both
speech
and
writing
when
predicting
or
scheduling
future
events.
Example:
Domani
dormiranno
a
casa
dopo
la
lunga
giornata.
Another
use
is
in
narrative
or
reporting
to
describe
what
a
group
will
do
later.
languages
such
as
Spanish
dormir
and
French
dormir.
The
noun
for
the
act
of
sleep,
sonno
in
Italian,
is
a
different
part
of
speech
but
shares
semantic
roots
with
dormire.