The Local Way to Say It
When you're making plans for a fiesta in Madrid, you'll hear 'traer' in the future tense all the time. It's how Madrileños confirm who's bringing what. Forget 'voy a traer' for a formal promise; the simple future is direct and clear. Imagine you're at a bar in La Latina, planning a get-together. Someone asks, '¿Qué traerás a la cena?' (What will you bring to dinner?). You might reply, 'Yo traeré mi famosa tortilla de patatas, ¡claro!' (I'll bring my famous potato omelet, of course!). Or your friend might add, '¡Y ella traerá las cervezas!' (And she will bring the beers!). It's simple, elegant, and definitive.The 'Grammar Math'
The future simple in Spanish is surprisingly straightforward, even for a verb like traer. The 'grammar math' is simple: it's the infinitive of the verb plus the future endings. No tricky stem changes here, unlike some other tenses!Traer + Future Endings = To Bring (in the future)
Here’s how it breaks down for you:
Yo traeré (I will bring)
Tú traerás (You will bring)
Él/Ella/Usted traerá (He/She/You formal will bring)
Nosotros/as traeremos (We will bring)
Vosotros/as traeréis (You all will bring)
Ellos/Ellas/Ustedes traerán (They/You all formal will bring)
Just attach these endings directly to the full verb traer, and you're set for making those party promises!