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imporremo

Imporremo is the first-person plural (noi) form of the Italian verb imporre in the future indicative, meaning "we will impose" or "we shall impose." The verb imporre means to place something upon someone, to set down rules, restrictions, taxes, or conditions, or more broadly to enforce.

Origins and conjugation notes: Imporre comes from Latin imponere, meaning "to place upon." In Italian, it is

Usage: Imporre is commonly used in formal, political, legal, or administrative contexts, where authorities or groups

Examples:

- Noi imporremo nuove norme per la sicurezza sul lavoro. (We will impose new safety rules.)

- Il governo ha annunciato che imporremo tasse più eque a tutti i cittadini. (The government announced

See also: The related forms of imporre in other tenses (impongo, impone, imporrò, imporrà, imponiamo) and nouns

a
transitive
verb.
For
the
future
tense,
the
stem
undergoes
a
double-consonant
change,
yielding
forms
such
as
imporrò,
imporrai,
imporrà,
imporremo,
imporrete,
and
imporranno.
Therefore,
imporremo
literally
corresponds
to
the
standard
future
ending
for
-ere
verbs
with
the
irregular
stem
change
in
this
verb
class.
announce
measures,
rules,
or
obligations.
It
can
also
appear
in
journalism
and
opinion
writing
when
describing
planned
actions
or
policy
decisions.
The
term
carries
a
sense
of
authority
or
obligation
and
is
not
neutral
in
tone
when
describing
coercive
or
mandatory
measures.
that
we
will
impose
more
equitable
taxes
on
all
citizens.)
such
as
imposto,
which
shares
the
same
root
but
has
different
meanings.
Imporremo
should
be
distinguished
from
the
noun
imposto
(tax)
and
from
synonyms
like
imporre
versus
consentire,
depending
on
the
context.