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tradurranno

Tradurranno is the third-person plural future indicative form of the Italian verb tradurre, meaning to translate. It expresses that a group (they) will translate something in the future. It is used in ordinary prose and formal writing to indicate future action by multiple subjects.

Form and conjugation: The infinitive tradurre yields a future stem of tradurr-. With the standard future endings

Etymology and meaning: The Italian verb tradurre derives from Latin traducere, meaning “to lead across” or “to

Usage notes: Tradurranno is a standard, unambiguous future tense form used when referring to a group performing

for
-ere
verbs,
the
forms
are:
io
tradurrò,
tu
tradurrai,
lui/lei
tradurrà,
noi
tradurremo,
voi
tradurrete,
essi
tradurranno.
The
double
r
in
tradition
with
the
stem
tradurr-
is
a
regular
feature
of
this
verb
pattern.
Thus
tradurranno
corresponds
to
the
pronoun
ellos/they,
not
explicitly
stated
in
the
sentence.
bring
across,”
a
sense
that
evolved
into
the
modern
meaning
of
converting
text
from
one
language
to
another.
The
form
tradurranno
inherits
this
root
and
is
related
to
other
forms
such
as
tradurrà
(he/she
will
translate)
and
tradurre
(to
translate)
overall.
translation.
It
is
not
a
noun
or
adjective;
its
meaning
depends
on
the
subject
equipped
by
context
or
explicit
pronouns.
In
translation
studies
or
linguistic
description,
it
is
often
cited
as
an
example
of
the
regular
future
endings
for
-ere
verbs
with
the
-urr-
stem.
Example:
Se
hanno
tempo,
essi
tradurranno
i
documenti
entro
domani.