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facietis

Facietis is a Latin verb form describing the future action of a group. Specifically, it is the second person plural future active indicative of facere, meaning “you all will do” or “you all will make.”

Formation and morphology can be described as follows: facere is a so-called -io verb, and its future

Usage notes: Facietis is used in classical Latin to refer to actions that the addressed plural will

Examples:

- Quid facietis cras? What will you all do tomorrow?

- Facietisne id? Will you do that?

See also: facere, the verb “to do/make”; faciet (3rd person singular future), facitis (present 2nd person plural);

active
indicative
endings
for
the
second
person
plural
are
-ietis.
The
form
facietis
is
built
from
the
stem
fac-,
plus
the
thematic
vowel
and
the
-ietis
ending,
yielding
the
meaning
“you
(all)
will
do/make.”
perform
in
the
future.
It
appears
in
direct
questions,
conditional
clauses,
and
statements
about
planned
or
expected
activity.
It
is
distinct
from
facitis,
which
is
the
present
tense
“you
all
do.”
Latin
verb
conjugation
for
-io
verbs.