Questions & Answers about La llamaré más tarde.
What does the pronoun la refer to here?
Why is the pronoun placed before the verb?
With a conjugated (finite) verb like llamaré, object pronouns go before it: La llamaré. You only attach pronouns to infinitives, gerunds, and affirmative commands: llamarla, estoy llamándola, llámala.
So can I say “Llamaréla”?
No. You can’t attach a pronoun to a finite future form. Say La llamaré; or use an infinitive: Voy a llamarla / La voy a llamar.
Is there a nuance between La llamaré and La voy a llamar / Voy a llamarla?
All express an intention. In everyday Spain, voy a + infinitive and even the present (La llamo luego) are more common for near-future plans; La llamaré often sounds a bit more formal or like a promise/commitment.
How would I say “I will call him later” in Spain?
Could La llamaré also mean “I will call you” (speaking to someone)?
How do I say “I’ll call you later” for different “you” forms in Spain?
- Informal singular (tú): Te llamaré más tarde.
- Formal singular (usted): Very common: Le llamaré más tarde (for either gender); non‑leísta alternatives: Lo llamaré (man), La llamaré (woman).
- Informal plural (vosotros): Os llamaré más tarde.
- Formal plural (ustedes): Los/Las llamaré más tarde (men/mixed = los; only women = las).
Why does llamaré have an accent?
In the simple future, the stress falls on the last syllable: llamaré. The accent mark on é shows that stress and distinguishes it from other forms.
Why does más have an accent?
How do I pronounce it?
Do I need the preposition a with a person’s name?
Is La llamaré a Ana ever correct?
Not in standard Peninsular usage. Doubling the direct object pronoun with a full noun (“La llamaré a Ana”) is generally avoided; say Llamaré a Ana, or if it’s clear from context, La llamaré. Clitic doubling is common with indirect objects, not with direct objects in Spain.
Does llamar by itself imply a phone call?
What’s the difference between llamar and llamarse?
Can I move the time expression around?
How do I make it negative or a command?
- Negative future: No la llamaré.
- Affirmative command: Llámala (tú), Llámela (usted), Llamadla (vosotros), Llámenla (ustedes).
- Negative command: No la llames (tú), No la llame (usted), etc. In affirmative commands the pronoun attaches; in negatives it goes before.
What about plural objects?
Could la here be the article “the”?
Is the subject pronoun missing?
Spanish normally drops subject pronouns. Llamaré already encodes yo (“I”), so Yo la llamaré is only for emphasis or contrast.
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