I'm assuming that before using this form the paragraph would start out using a tense that would ground the event in the past. Thus I'm assuming you would not start out saying "Martina se llevará una gran sorpresa al ver de nuevo a su madre". You'd instead start out with saying ""Martina pensaba que su madre había fallecido" or something else that signals we're talking about the past. Is this right?
First establish that we're talking about the past?
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Rebekah R.Kwiziq community member
First establish that we're talking about the past?
This question relates to:Spanish lesson "Using the simple conditional/the simple future to narrate past actions in Spanish"
Asked 7 months ago
InmaNative Spanish expert teacher in Kwiziq
Hola Rebekah
Yes, you're right, this use of the future/conditional, normally found in literature, generally comes with a previous sentence that places the scene in the past tense, and then you find a later sentence using the future/conditional expressing "a future scene within that past time frame" - If you have a look at the paragraph we include in the lesson about Picasso's life, you can see that first past reference so that the next sentences make sense.
I hope this clarified it
Saludos
Inma
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