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succederà

Succederò is the first-person singular form of the Italian verb succedere in the future tense (tempo futuro semplice). The verb has two main senses in Italian: to happen or to occur, and to succeed someone in an office or role. Accordingly, succederò can mean “I will happen” in contexts referring to events that will take place, or “I will succeed (in taking over) a position” when used with appropriate prepositions or constructions.

Etymology and usage: succedere comes from Latin succedere, from sub- “under” + cedere “to go/yield,” originally conveying

Conjugation and forms: succedere is a regular -ere verb, so its future forms are succederò, succederai, succederà,

Usage notes: In contemporary Italian, the primary everyday sense of succedere is “to happen.” The form succederò

Related terms include successione (succession) and succedere nel tempo (to follow in time).

the
idea
of
coming
after
or
following.
In
modern
Italian,
the
sense
to
occur
is
intransitive
(succedere
without
a
direct
object),
while
the
sense
to
replace
someone
in
a
position
uses
constructions
such
as
successione
a
qualcuno
or
succedere
nel
ruolo.
succederemo,
succederete,
succederanno.
The
distinct
meaning
is
usually
inferred
from
context,
with
the
ontological
sense
(“to
happen”)
more
common
in
everyday
speech,
and
the
“to
succeed
someone”
sense
used
in
formal
or
administrative
contexts.
is
most
naturally
interpreted
as
“I
will
succeed
(in
taking
over)
a
role”
when
used
with
a
following
reference
(e.g.,
succederò
al
sindaco/nel
incarico).
For
expressing
personal
success
in
achieving
a
goal,
Italian
often
prefers
riuscre
o
avere
successo;
succedere
in
the
sense
of
taking
over
is
more
specialized.