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vivrai

Vivrai is the second-person singular form of the Italian verb vivere in the future simple tense. It is used to indicate that the subject you will live or exist in the future, either literally or in a figurative sense.

Conjugation and usage: The verb vivere belongs to the third conjugation (-ere) in Italian. In the future

Versus related forms: Other futures with the same stem include vivrò (I will live) and vivrà (he/she

Etymology and context: Vivrai inherits its meaning and core form from Latin vivere, meaning to live. The

See also: vivere; infinito di vivere; future indicative in Italian; Italian verb conjugation.

simple,
the
stem
becomes
vivr-
and
the
endings
are
added:
io
vivrò,
tu
vivrai,
lui/lei
vivrà,
noi
vivremo,
voi
vivrete,
loro
vivranno.
Therefore,
vivrai
translates
to
“you
will
live.”
Examples:
Tu
vivrai
domani
in
una
nuova
casa.
Se
lavori
bene,
vivrai
felice.
The
form
is
common
in
everyday
speech,
literature,
and
media
and
can
express
straightforward
future
events,
promises,
or
hypothetical
outcomes.
will
live).
The
present
tense
forms
use
a
different
stem
(vivo,
vivi,
vive,
viviamo,
vivete,
vivono).
The
infinitive
remains
vivere,
from
which
all
derived
forms,
including
vivrai,
are
generated.
Italian
verb
and
its
conjugations
reflect
the
broader
Romance-language
pattern
for
-ere
verbs,
preserving
the
semantic
sense
of
existence,
duration,
or
life
in
the
future.