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faciet

Faciet is the third-person singular future indicative active form of the Latin verb facere, meaning “to do” or “to make.” In translation, faciet is rendered as “he will do” or “she/it will make.” Facere is a core, highly common verb in Latin, and faciet appears frequently in classical and later Latin to express future action.

Form and grammar notes: Faciet is derived from the stem fac- with the standard future ending for

Usage and examples: Faciet is used to refer to actions that will occur in the future. For

Related forms and notes: The present tense is facit (“he does”), and the imperfect is faciebat (“he

-io
verbs
in
Latin.
The
full
future
indicative
forms
of
facere
are
typically
given
as
faciam,
facies,
faciet,
faciemus,
facietis,
facient.
This
places
faciet
as
the
3rd
person
singular,
“he/she/it
will
do.”
Facere
is
irregular
in
its
principal
parts
(fac-
i,
fec-
i,
fact-
us)
but
follows
regular
future
endings
for
the
-io
verb
class
in
most
derived
forms.
example,
Marcus
id
faciet
means
“Marcus
will
do
that.”
Hoc
faciet
translates
to
“He
will
do
this.”
In
narrative
or
argumentative
Latin,
faciet
often
appears
in
clauses
describing
planned
or
expected
outcomes,
sometimes
paired
with
ut
or
cum
clauses
to
express
intended
consequence
or
sequence.
was
doing”).
The
verb
facere
belongs
to
the
Latin
-io
verb
class,
with
a
principal
range
of
meanings
from
simple
“to
do/make”
to
more
specialized
senses
such
as
“to
perform,
create,
cause.”
See
also
facere,
Latin
grammar,
and
the
future
tense
in
Latin
conjugation.