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Answer 1

Lo haré -------pronounced "Low array" Lo haré means "I will do it." In Spanish, you can't just say "I will." You have to use a verb after it, such as "I will go," or whatever you are going to do.

Answer 2

"I will" has two meanings in English.

If you mean "I will" in the sense that you cause something to occur (i.e. I willed the building to collapse.) the Spanish equivalent is "Yo causo" or "Yo ocasiono".

If you mean "I will" to indicate the simple future tense (i.e. I will eat a grapefruit.) there is no exact Spanish equivalent. English tends to build out its tenses by using multiple words. I will eat and I would eat. Spanish pushes these into the actual single word conjugation of the verb. In most cases (as there are irregular verbs), add "é" to the infinitive to get the future tense.

Some future tense examples

comer + é = comeré (I will eat)

viajar + é = viajaré (I will travel)

decidir + é = decidiré (I will decide)

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9y ago

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