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Italian verbs have a high degree of inflection, the majority of which follows one of three common patterns of conjugation. Italian conjugation is affected by mood, person, tense, number, aspect and occasionally gender. The three classes of verbs (patterns of conjugation) are distinguished by the endings of the infinitive form of the verb:
However, some languages combine such an auxiliary with the main verb to produce a simple (one-word, morphological) future tense. This is the origin of the future tense in Western Romance languages such as French and Italian (see below). A given language may have more than one way to express futurity.
Italian inherits consecutio temporum, a grammar rule from Latin that governs the relationship between the tenses in principal and subordinate clauses. Consecutio temporum has very rigid rules. These rules require the subjunctive tense in order to express contemporaneity, posteriority and anteriority in relation with the principal clause.
Owing to sound changes which made it homophonous with the preterite, the Latin future indicative tense was dropped, and replaced with a periphrasis of the form infinitive + present tense of habēre (to have). Eventually, this structure was reanalysed as a new future tense. In a similar process, an entirely new conditional form was created.
The future of the past tense/aspect uses the future form since the use of the past tense form to mark the time of perspective retains its influence throughout the rest of the sentence: Da gai sed hi gon fiks mi ap ("The guy said he [was] gonna fix me up").
The future indicative tense does not derive from the Latin form (which tended to be confounded with the preterite due to sound changes in Vulgar Latin), but rather from an infinitive + habeō periphrasis, later reanalysed as a simple tense. Formally identical to the future perfect indicative, the two paradigms merged in Vulgar Latin.
Italian: Giovanni mangerebbe ... The same presumptive mood conjugations are used for present, future, and past tenses. [13] [14] [15] Presumptive Mood Conjugations ...
Unlike in Italian, but in common with many South Italian dialects, Pantesco has no synthetic construction of the future tense. [5] Instead it forms its future tense by inflecting ˈjiːrɪ ("to go") before the verb. [5] Mainland Sicilian has a similar structure using the verb to go, but rather than using the infinitive, in Pantesco the ...