Visitaré is the first person singular (yo/I) future tense of the verb visitar, to visit. You can use visitaré when talking about visiting more than one person, in which case, the persons are treated grammatically as direct objects. Example: "Yo les visitaré a Juan y a Maria hoy." "I will visit Juan and Maria today." However, as a predicate of such a sentence, visitaré can ONLY be used with the singular subject pronoun (yo/I).
It depends on how is being used for instance if you say am talking it is present continous tense and if you say i was talking when you called it is past tense and if you also say i will be talking by the time you come back that is future tense
yes, Future tense for first person
The past tense of "does" is "did," and the future tense is "will do."
The second-person future perfect tense of to write would be you will have written.
You Will collect is the future tense used for all persons.
The future tense of "disappear" is "will disappear."
The second-person future perfect tense of to write would be you will have written.
Present tense - step (steps is used for singular subjects in the third person) Past tense - stepped Future tense - will step
Treats can be either a plural noun or the third-person singular present tense of the verb "treat". The future tense is "will treat".
The future tense of bring is will bring.
The verb in the sentence "Your sister is a happy person" is is (a form of the verb to be). To put this sentence in the future tense, you would say, "Your sister will be a happy person."
The future tense of "reside" for a second person singular would be "you will reside."