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vendrá

Vendrá is the third-person singular form of the Spanish verb venir in the future simple tense. It translates to will come in English and can refer to he, she, or you formal (usted). The form expresses a future action or event and is commonly used to make predictions, express intentions, or narrate plans.

Form and origin: The future tense of venir is formed with an irregular stem, vendr-, plus the

Usage and nuance: Vendrá is used to indicate a future occurrence with clarity about the subject. It

Examples: Mañana vendrá el cartero. Ella vendrá a las cinco. Cuando venga el jefe, le daré la

standard
future
endings:
-é,
-ás,
-á,
-emos,
-éis,
-án.
Therefore,
the
full
paradigm
for
ven
ir’s
future
includes
vendré,
vendrás,
vendrá,
vendremos,
vendréis,
venderán.
The
accent
on
vendrá
marks
the
stress
on
the
last
syllable.
Venir
itself
comes
from
Latin
venīre,
and
the
future
stem
vendr-
reflects
a
historical
phonetic
change
in
this
verb’s
conjugation.
can
stand
alone
or
appear
within
clauses,
including
subordinate
clauses
that
require
the
subjunctive,
such
as
cuando
venga
or
hasta
que
venga.
It
is
common
in
everyday
speech,
news,
and
literature
to
convey
certainty
about
someone’s
coming,
a
promise,
or
a
scheduled
arrival.
Synonyms
or
closely
related
future
verbs
include
llegará
or
vendrá
pronto
in
contextual
contrasts,
but
vendrá
specifically
retains
the
venir-based
sense
of
“to
come.”
noticia.