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metterete

Metterete is a form of the Italian verb mettere, meaning you will put or you will place. It is the second-person plural (voi) in the simple future tense, used to describe an action that you all will perform in the future. As a future form, metterete appears only with the subject voi and is common in ordinary speech and writing.

In Italian, verbs are conjugated to reflect mood, tense, person, and number. The full future indicative conjugation

Usage notes: metterete is used when addressing a group to indicate a future action involving placing something

Related terms: Mettere, Italian verb conjugation, Italian future tense. Metterete illustrates how Italian forms encode person

of
mettere
is:
io
metterò,
tu
metterai,
lui/lei
metterà,
noi
metteremo,
voi
metterete,
loro
metteranno.
The
stem
for
this
tense
is
mett-,
and
the
standard
endings
for
-ere
verbs
are
-ò,
-ai,
-à,
-emo,
-ete,
-anno.
The
mett-
stem
derives
from
the
Latin
mittere,
via
the
regular
development
of
many
Italian
verbs
from
Latin
roots.
somewhere.
It
can
be
combined
with
direct
objects
and
various
prepositional
phrases:
for
example,
"Voi
metterete
i
documenti
sulla
scrivania"
means
you
will
put
the
documents
on
the
desk.
In
broader
narrative
or
reported
speech,
metterete
may
appear
as
part
of
larger
verb
constructions
that
express
future
intentions.
and
number
in
a
single
word
while
sharing
a
common
root
with
other
Romance
languages.