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planeas

Planeas is a Spanish verb form that functions as the second-person singular present indicative of two related verbs: planear and planear in its glide sense. In practice, planeas most often appears with the meaning “you plan” or “you intend,” but it can also be interpreted as the second-person form of planear when the sense is “to glide,” depending on context.

Planear, in the sense of planning or arranging, is a common verb in everyday Spanish. Planeas something

The other sense of planear, to glide, refers to an object or craft moving smoothly through the

Planeas is a regular inflected form, derived from the root plan- with the standard -ear verb ending.

when
you
describe
your
intentions
for
the
near
future.
Examples
include:
¿Qué
planeas
hacer
mañana?
and
Planeas
terminar
el
informe
esta
tarde.
The
form
planeas
corresponds
to
tú,
and
is
part
of
the
regular
present
tense
conjugation
pattern
for
-ar
verbs
of
planear.
air.
In
this
sense
the
same
form
planeas
may
appear
in
contexts
where
the
subject
is
you
(as
in
tú
planeas)
but
the
meaning
would
be
clear
from
the
surrounding
words.
In
third-person
usage,
you
would
typically
see
planea
(él/ella
planea)
or
planean
(ellos/ellas
planean)
for
glide.
It
is
widely
used
in
both
Spain
and
Latin
American
Spanish,
and
its
meaning
is
determined
by
the
accompanying
nouns
and
verbs
in
a
sentence.