Italian Language Guide
Italian Language Guide
In passive sentences, the subject receives the action of the verb. In active sentences, the subject does the action.
However, the meaning of both sentences is the same. The passive form is only possible with transitive verbs and
is much more common in English than in Italian.
The passive form consists of the verb essere plus the past participle of the main verb followed by da (by) and its
contractions. Essere should be in the same tense as the verb in its corresponding active sentence.
The past participle agrees in gender and number with the subject.
Examples:
Italian Adjetives
Italian and English differ in their usage of adjectives. Italian descriptive adjectives are usually placed after the noun they
modify, and with which they agree in gender and number. As a difference with English, adjectives may be placed both
before and after the noun.
-are both correct, but in the second one the idea of large is slightly more. More examples:
- Adjectives ending in -o have four forms. They need to modify their endings for gender and number.
masculine singular -o
masculine plural -i
feminine singular -a
feminine plural -e
• freddo » cold • pieno » full
Examples:
• il gatto nero (the black cat, m) » i gatti neri (the black cats, m)
• la gatta nera (the black cat, f) » le gatte nere (the black cats, f)
• il ragazzo cattivo (the bad boy) » i ragazzi cattivi (the bad boys)
• la ragazza cattiva (the bad girl) » le ragazze cattive (the bad girls)
More:
- Italian Adjective’s II
Italian Adjectives
- Adjectives that end in -e do not need to modify their endings for gender. Their endings change to "i" only
depending on whether the noun is singular or plural. Examples:
There are quite a few other exceptions for forming plural adjectives. For instance, adjectives that end in -io
(with the stress falling on that i) form the plural with the ending -ii: addio/addii; leggio/leggii; zio/zii. The
table below contains a chart of other irregular adjective endings you should know.
Singular Ending Plural Ending Singular Ending Plural Ending
There are only 3 irregular adjectives: buono (good), bello (beautiful, nice), quello (that). When these adjectives
are put in front of their noun, they follow their own rules.
Italian Adverbs
An adverb (avverbio) is a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. An adverb can be compared
to an adjective but instead it says something about a verb or an adjective instead of a noun.
In English, adverbs are often formed by adding the suffix -ly to adjectives: slowly, softly, surely. Adverbs often
answer the question: come? (how?), quando? (when?), or dove? (where?)
In Italian, many adverbs are formed by adding the ending -mente (which corresponds to the suffix -ly) to the
feminine form of the adjective:
If the adjective ends in -le or -re, the final vowel e is dropped before adding the suffix -mente:
Italian Articles
In Italian, as well as all the other Romance languages (French, Spanish, etc), all nouns have a gender and a
number associated with them. The article indicates gender (masculine/feminine) and number (singular/plural) of
the noun.
"il"-"lo" are the definite article that corresponds to masculine nouns. Examples:
il professore » the teacher.
il telefono » the phone.
il vecchio zio » the old uncle.
“la” is the definite article that corresponds to feminine nouns. Examples:
la casa » the house.
la tavola » the table.
la finestra » the window.
When using nouns, you must make sure that you use the correct gender and number when using an identifier. The
identifiers are il, lo, la, i, gli, le, un, uno and una. Il, lo and la are singular definite articles, which means you are
talking about a specific thing. Examples:
The use of these identifiers is identical to the way you would say it in English - if you want to say "a table", use
una, and if you want to say "the table", use la.
"i" and "gli" are the plural of "il" and "lo", and "le" is the plural of "la". You use these plural definite articles
when you are talking about several specific members of a group. There are no plural forms of uno and una, and to
translate "some" when used in sentences, one must use indeterminate pronouns. Examples
Examples:
gli-GLI: It is used whith masculine nouns starting with vowels, the consonant z , cluster gn or clusters
made of s+consonant.
i-I: It is used whith masculine nouns starting with consonants which do not belong to the previous case:
le-LE: It is used before any plural feminine noun
Examples:
When the noun to which the article applies is a masculine noun then "a/an" can be translated as "un", or "uno", if
the article applies to a feminine noun then the article that has to be used is "una". As the definite articles, there are
some rules to understand the use of these articles:
Examples:
A train and a bicycle
º un treno e una bicicletta
º un aeroplano e un’automobile An airplane and a car
º uno stadio e una stazione One(an) stage and one(a) station
When plural nouns are indefinite, they simply do not use an article, or they use the partitive form: i.e. cats (no
article) or some cats (partitive), coins or some coins (partitive), etc. Partitive will be dealt with further on, so for
the time being simply disregard its use.
Generally speaking, "avere" is used with Transitive verbs (verbs which take an object) while "essere" is used
with Reflexive and Intransitive verbs (verbs of motion, position, physical or mental condition, etc.). Examples:
"Stare" (to stay, to be) is used as an auxiliary verb with adverbial participles (so-called gerunds) to form
Progresive Tenses:
Future
Futuro Anteriore will have done avrò fatto
Perfect
The choice of whether to use avere or essere depends on the type of verb:
● Non-reflexive transitive verbs (i.e. verbs that take a direct object) use avere
● Intransitive verbs (verbs that do not take a direct object), verbs of motion, and reflexive verbs (even if those verbs
are based on transitive verbs) take essere
(*) The Trapassato Prossimo (Recent Pluperfect) and the Trapassato Remoto (Remote Pluperfect) are separate tenses in
Italian though not in English.
More:
- Compound Tenses
Present Perfect: The passato prossimo—grammatically referred to as the present perfect—is a compound tense
(tempo composto) that expresses a fact or action that happened in the recent past or that occurred long ago but
still has ties to the present. Examples:
Future perfect: The futuro anteriore or future perfect tense is a compound tense. How to express the idea of "I
will have" or "they will have"? Use future perfect tense. Examples:
Alle sette avremo già mangiato » By seven we'll already have eaten
Noi avremo parlato al padre di Anna » We will already have spoken to Anna's father
Pluperfect (past perfect tense): In English the past perfect tense (trapassato prossimo) is formed with the
auxiliary "had" + the past participle of the main verb. In Italian, the trapassato prossimo, a compound tense, is
formed with the imperfetto of the auxiliary verb avere or essere and the past participle of the acting verb.
Già erano partiti quando sono arrivato » They had already left when I arrived
Avevo chiuso le finestre quando è cominciato a piovere » I had shut the windows when it started to rain
La macchina sbandava perché aveva piovuto » The car was sliding because it had rained
Past anterior (trapassato remoto): Known in English as the preterite perfect, is used primarily in literary
contexts. It's a compound tense formed with the passato remoto of the auxiliary verb avere or essere and the past
participle of the acting verb.
To see how avere and essere conjugate in the remote past tense, see the tables below.
As you can see, in each sentence set in the trapassato remoto, you will encounter an expression of time, such as
the following: appena (scarcely), dopo che (as soon as), or finché non (up until).
Italian Conjugation
The infinitives of all Regular Verbs in Italian end in are, ere, or ire and are referred to as first, second, or third
conjugation verbs, respectively.
o amare - to love.
o temere - to fear.
o sentire - to hear.
See Italian Verbs for some examples of verb termination and features.
Below you have detailed lists with three italian regular verbs’s conjugations in the eight simple & compound
tenses: Parlare (To talk) Scrivere (To write) Dormire (To sleep) and Capire (to understand). The last one has a
different conjugation in present tense, as you can see in the first table, but is a regular verb as well.
Conjugation of irregular verbs: While the majority of Italian verbs are regular, many of the most commonly
used ones are irregular; they do not follow the regular pattern of conjugation (infinitive stem + endings). In
particular, the auxiliary verbs essere and avere, and the common modal verbs potere (ability, to be able to),
dovere (duty, to have to), stare (to stand, to be in a particular state), sapere (to know), and volere (to want to) are
all irregular.
Depending on the language, a verb may vary in form according to many factors, possibly including its tense,
aspect, mood and voice. It may also agree with the person, gender, and/or number of some of its arguments (what
we usually call subject, object, etc.). Examples:
In Italian, most verbs end in a common pattern, such as -are, -ere, and -ire. These are the 1st, 2nd and 3rd
conjugations respectively. Examples:
to to to to
parlare scrivere dormire finire
speak write sleep finish
to to to to
cantare vedere partire colpire
sing see leave hit
to to to to
lavorare vendere aprire costruire
work sell open build
to to to to
amare vivere servire sparire
love live serve disappear
The features of the verbs are:
(*) There are few verbs of the -ire conjugation in Italian that have different suffix.
Simple Tense Conjugation
Below we have a list of 3 regular verbs and their simple tense conjugation.
» Present Tense:
noi (We) avevamo parlato avevamo scritto avevamo dormito avevamo capito
voi (You) avevate parlato avevate scritto avevate dormito avevate capito
loro (They) avevano parlato avevano scritto avevano dormito avevano capito
noi (We) avremo parlato avremo scritto avremo dormito avremo capito
voi (You) avrete parlato avrete scritto avrete dormito avrete capito
loro (They) avranno parlato avranno scritto avranno dormito avranno capito
noi (We) avemmo parlato avemmo scritto avemmo dormito avemmo capito
voi (You) aveste parlato aveste scritto aveste dormito aveste capito
loro (They) ebbero parlato ebbero scritto ebbero dormito ebbero capito
Italian Conjunction
Conjunctions (le congiunzioni) join words and sentences together. Some of them are simple and common and don't cause
any trouble--such as "e" and "o." Some other, longer ones require the use of the subjunctive. They are:
Some others require the use of the subjunctive only if the subject of the main verb and the subject of the subjunctive are
different; if the subjects are the same, the infinitive is required. They are:
- affinché, perché, cosicché, in modo che » in order to, so that
- senza che » without
- prima che » before
Italian Subjunctive
The Subjunctive mood expresses doubt, uncertainty, hope, fear, possibility, opinions,
etc. and is used much more frequently in Italian. It is mainly used in dependent clauses
(sentences introduced by a conjunction that do not have a complete meaning) that are
introduced by che.
Italian subjunctive has four forms. The two first ones (Present and Imperfect
Subjunctive) are simple tenses, with their own inflections:
And the last compound tenses (congiuntivo passato and congiuntivo trapassato) are
made in the same way as the indicative ones (auxiliary verb + past participle of the
main verb), though the two auxiliaries essere and avere use subjunctive inflections.
Present Subjunctive
The present subjunctive of regular verbs is formed by dropping the normal endings, and adding these new endings:
In the other hand, most irregular verbs that change stem in the present conjugation change stem in the "congiuntivo".
The table below provides examples of three regular verbs conjugated in the present subjunctive tense.
Examples:
• Ho paura che sia troppo tardi » I am afraid it may be too late
• Credo che lavino il cane molto spesso
» I think that they wash the dog very often
• Desidero che venga con me » I want her to come with me
• Spero che prenda la giusta decisione
» I hope that he / she takes (= will take) the right decision
• Penso che dorma » I think he's sleeping
• Che abbia venduto la macchina? » I wonder if he sold his car
Imperfect Subjunctive
Is used when the action expressed in a conditional sentence is not sure: if I came...; in the case you went...; should he
call...; etc. This subjunctive is formed by adding personal endings to the imperfect stem.
For conjugations of regular verbs, the endings are identical for all three conjugations:
Examples:
Perfect Subjunctive
The Perfect subjunctive or past subjunctive ("congiuntivo passato"), is a "compound tense" (like the "passato prossimo")
because it is formed with the present subjunctive of an auxiliary verbs ("essere" or "avere") plus the past participle of a
verb.
Whether it requires "essere" or "avere", depends on the verb. If the verb is a transitive verb, it requires the auxiliary
"avere". If the verb is intransitive (like most verbs that express movement or state of being) or if the verb is reflexive, it
requires the auxiliary "essere".
Verbs that express movement, like "venire" (to come), "andare" (to go), "uscire" (to go out)... require the
auxiliary "essere"
Verbs that express state of being, like "essere" (to be), "stare" (to stay), "rimanere" (to remain), "nascere" (to be
born)... require the auxiliary "essere"
Examples:
Pluperfect
To complete the fourth of subjunctive-tense verb forms, there's the congiuntivo trapassato
(referred to as the past perfect subjunctive in English), which is a compound tense. Form this
tense with the congiuntivo imperfetto of the auxiliary verb avere or essere and the past
participle of the acting verb.
Bellow we have a list with some examples of congiuntivo trapassato with the verbs
"mangiare" (to eat), "leggere" (to read), "andare" (to go) and "venire" (to come).
AVERE ESSERE
As well as the congiuntivo passato, the verbs "Dormire" (to sleep), "rispondere" (to answer),
"viaggiare" (to travel), "vivere" (to live) though intransitive require the auxiliary "avere"
("avessi dormito, avessi risposto, avessi viaggiato, avessi vissuto...")
Verbs that express movement, like "venire" (to come), "andare" (to go), "uscire" (to go out)...
require the auxiliary "essere"
Verbs that express state of being, like "essere" (to be), "stare" (to stay), "rimanere" (to
remain), "nascere" (to be born)... require the auxiliary "essere"
Examples:
Examples:
gli-GLI: It is used whith masculine nouns starting with vowels, the consonant z , cluster gn or clusters
made of s+consonant.
i-I: It is used whith masculine nouns starting with consonants which do not belong to the previous case:
le-LE: It is used before any plural feminine noun
Examples:
Demonstrative Adjectives
When demonstrative pronouns questo (questa, questi, queste) and quello (quella, quelli, quelle) are followed by a
noun, they turn into adjectives.
Codesto refers to something near the person being spoken to, but itis falling into disuse: quello is replacing it.
There is elision of questo, questa, and quella before a noun beginning with a vowel. Examples:
Questa is sometimes shortened to "sta" and contracted with the noun it modifies:
Demonstratives agree in gender and number with the nouns they modify, and always precede them:
More examples:
Demonstrative Pronouns
They are used to indicate a person or an object, as if pointing towards it with a finger. As for the possessives, the
adjectives and the pronouns for the demonstratives have the same form. The Demonstrative Pronouns are:
o Questo è il tuo cane » this is your dog, or this one is your dog
o Quella è mia madre » that one (= that woman) is my mother
o Quelli sono i suoi libri » those are his/her books, or those ones are his/her books
o Queste sono le nostre zie » these are our aunts or these ones are our aunts
o Questa e quella sono identiche » this one and that one are identical
These pronouns may be used either as a subject of the sentence (as in the previous examples), or as an object (as
in the following sentences), in which case the English translation always includes ...one:
o (egli / ella) non prese questa, ma quella » he / she did not take this one, but that one
o (tu) comprerai quelli » you will buy those ones
o Domani vernicerò questi » tomorrow I will paint these ones
o Preferite questo o quello? » do you prefer this one or that one?
Italian Determiners
Determiners are words (as an article, possessive, demonstrative or quantifier) that makes
specific the denotation of a noun phrase. In Italian they agree in gender and number with the
noun.
Articles (a, an, the): They are used before nouns, but in Italian, nouns have gender and the
articles must agree with the gender. Masculine words generally end in -o and feminine words
generally end in -a. Words that end in -e may be either, so you will just have to memorize the
gender.
Examples:
See [Italian Articles] for a deeper explanation and some examples of definite and undefinite
articles.
Examples:
Singular Plural
il nostro amico » our friend (male) i nostri amici » our friends (males)
Examples:
Singular Plural
Italian Exclamation
The exclamation "What...!" is expressed in Italian with the help of the word che. These phrases will surely prove
to be very useful in your Italian conversations:
The Exclamation Pronouns give a stronger emphasis to an exclamation, although their use is not always
necessary. The more usually exclamation pronouns are:
Italian Gerund
This is equivalent to the English present participle — i.e. the part of the verb ending in
-ing, like thinking, running, talking, going etc.
Adverbial participles answer questions about the action expressed by the main verb.
Examples:
They are used like English present participles to form progressive tenses with the verb
"stare":
Because they function as adverbs, defining an action, these participles are invariable in
form, and do not agree in gender or number with the subject of the verb.
The Adverbial Present Participle (Gerundio perfetto) is formed with the adverbial
present participle of the auxiliary verb and the past participle of the main verb:
"avendo parlato" (having spoken); "essendo arrivato" (having arrived).
The Italian name "gerundio" has led to the use of the English word "gerund" to denote
adverbial participles. This is misleading, since the English gerund is a verbal noun
("Walking is good exercise"). It is best for English--speaking students to avoid using
the term "gerund" when studying the Romance languages like Spanish and Italian.
Examples:
The ending follows the form of unisex adjectives ending in "_e," changing to "_i" in
the plural: "l'uomo dormente" (the sleeping man); "le lezione seguenti" (the following
lessons).
When the noun to which the article applies is a masculine noun then "a/an" can be
translated as "un", or "uno", if the article applies to a feminine noun then the article
that has to be used is "una". As the definite articles, there are some rules to understand
the use of these articles:
Examples:
A train and a bicycle
º un treno e una bicicletta
º un aeroplano e un’automobile An airplane and a car
º uno stadio e una stazione One(an) stage and one(a) station
When plural nouns are indefinite, they simply do not use an article, or they use the
partitive form: i.e. cats (no article) or some cats (partitive), coins or some coins
(partitive), etc. Partitive will be dealt with further on, so for the time being simply
disregard its use.
Italian Interjection
An interjection is a word or expression often given increased emotive value in the stream of speech.
Although a interjección can form a complete sentence (that is to say, expressing a thought with no need of a
subject and a verb), one can often also be inserted within an sentence, separated generally by commas of the rest
of the sentence. Interjections are rarely used in formal or business writing. In print interjection is usually followed
by an exclamation mark or a comma:
suvvia! = C'mon!
aiuto! = help!
hey! = hey!
oh! = wow!
ahi! = ouch!
bontà mia! = My goodness!
Examples:
You can see a list with the Ten more used Italian Exclamating Expressions
Italian intonation
You love those melodious sounds at the opera, and listening to the voices of those Italian stars in foreign films is an aural
thrill.
Below You have some tips will help you to sound like you were born in Italy:
» When the final -e is dropped from a word, as happens with some masculine titles when they are directly followed by
a proper name, the position of the stress remains unchanged.
» Following the above rule, dottore (doctor) becomes dottor Nardi/Doctor Nardi and professore (professor) becomes
professor Pace/Professor Pace.
» When words are stressed on the last vowel, they always have a written accent over that vowel. For instance, cioè
(namely) and città (city).
Additionally You can see a list with the Ten more used Italian Exclamating Expressions
Italian Nouns
Noun (nome) is a person, place, or thing. Nouns have endings that change depending on the gender and number. So, the
ending of an Italian noun reveals its gender (masculine or feminine) and number (singular or plural).
Singular Plural
il piatto bianco (the white plate) i piatti bianchi (the white plates)
MASC.
il cane grande (the large dog) i cani grandi (the large dogs)
Nouns often are accompanied by a masculine or feminine definite article (In english: "The"): il, lo, la (singular);
i, gli, le (plural). Indefinite articles (Like the English a, an, some) - un, una (singular). However, As in English,
there's no indefinite articles for plural nouns.
Noun Gender:
In English, a vast majority of nouns are neutre (masculine and feminine are only used for human beings or for animals),
while articles and adjectives have no gender at all. In Italian instead, nouns, adjectives and articles too are either
masculine or feminine, but never neutre.
Noun Number:
For nouns, the number (whether the word is singular or plural) works exactly as in English: the singular form is used when
referring to one subject and the plural form when referring to two or more. But in Italian also adjectives and articles are
number-sensitive, whereas in English only the noun changes; while in Italian also the article and the adjective would be
turned in plural form.
» Masculine » Feminine
Giornale (newspaper) F rase (sentence)
Pane (bread) Canzone (song)
Nome (name) Notte (night)
Gender Inflections for Nouns:
» Masculine » Feminine
Amico friend Amica friend
Bambino little boy Bambina little girl
Cugino cousin (he) Cugina cousin (she)
Figlio son Figlia daughter
Maestro master, teacher Maestra teacher (female)
The alteration -e : -a also occurs, cf.:
» Masculine » Feminine
Signore mister Signora mistress
Padrone master, owner Padrona mistress of the house
Sometimes masculine and feminine are derived from different (or modified) roots:
» Masculine » Feminine
frate friar soura nun
fratello brother sorella sister
padre father madre mother
uomo man donna woman
paperone drake oca duck
These are nouns with one form for both genders. Here are included all the nouns suffixed by -ista.
Examples:
Number Inflections for Nouns: There are many rules to obtain the plural of italian nouns; but, generally, the
plural is derived according to the following rules:
For regular masculine nouns that end in -o, the ending changes to -i in the plural. In the same way regular
feminine nouns that end in -a take on -e endings in the plural. Examples:
Italian Onomatopoeia
Bang! boom! pop! splat! thump! goosh! boing! sss!. As you say these words, you can hear each of these different sounds
that objects make, and there are lots more of them. That's onomatopoeia, using speech sounds to mimic sounds we hear
around us.
It has already been said that when the accent is carried by the last syllable, an accented vowel has to be used. Since most
vowels only take the grave accent, this is the only one that can be used:
Only the vowel e can take two different accents; according to the word, either one or the other should be used. These are
examples of words whose final e bears a grave accent ("wide" sound):
è he/she/it
In very few cases, an accented e can be very useful to mark the stressed syllable, thus the correct sound of the vowel:
Also in this case the accent is not mandatory; actually, many people spell both words pesca (i.e. with a normal e), because
the context of the sentence is enough to understand which of the two makes more sense.
Possessive Adjectives
Possessive adjectives are those that indicate possession or ownership. They correspond to the English "my",
"your", "his", "her", "its", "our", and "their".The Italian possessive adjectives are also preceded by definite
articles and agree in gender and number with the noun possessed, not with the possessor.
Possessive adjectives (aggettivi possessivi) and Possessive pronouns (pronomi possessivi) are usually compound
forms which include a definite article that is not translated into English. Also, they are identical in form; the
difference is in meaning. Where the possessive adjective "il mio" means "my," for example, the possessive
pronoun "il mio" means "mine": "le tue scarpe e le mie" » your shoes and mine.
It is important to note that possessives agree in gender and number with the thing possessed, rather than with the
possessor. Examples:
The table below provides a chart of possessive adjectives (aggettivi possessivi) in Italian:
Yo can see that mio, tuo and suo behave like normal adjectives except in the masculine plural. Also, loro does not
make any changes at all, it is invariable. Examples:
o la mia automobile è veloce » my car is fast (here my acts as an adjective for the noun car)
o la loro è lenta » theirs is slow (here theirs is a pronoun, meaning their car, not mentioned)
Only when the possessed noun is a specific family relative the article is dropped, as in English:
o mio padre è alto (not "il mio padre") » my father is tall
o mia madre è giovane (not "la mia madre") » my mother is young
o mio fratello è pigro (not "il mio fratello") » my brother is lazy
Another important difference is that while in English the gender of the possessive pronoun matches the possessor,
in Italian it matches the possessed subject:
Italian Prepositions
Prepositions are short words which express conditions, directions, specifications, such as of, over, to, from, etc.
Prepositions are those little words that mark places in space or time. When prepositions are used together with
definite articles, the preposition and the article are sometimes condensed into a single word. When they are not
followed (and bound) to articles, they are called "simple prepositions".
Simple prepositions: They are words that aren't followed by articles. Simple prepositions are:
di (d’) » of a » to da » from, by, since
in » in con » with tra, fra » between
su » on per » for
Di: "Di" means "of", indicating possession, or "from" (to be from). Examples:
When preposition "a" is followed by another word starting with a vowel, for mere phonetic reasons it changes to
"ad". Examples:
Da: "Da" means "since", "from" (to come from), "by" (passive) and it's used with location referring to people.
Examples:
Per: "Per" It can translate English for, to, by, or even as, according to the different use. Examples:
Tra-fra: "Tra" and "fra" mean "between" or "in" followed by a time expression. Examples:
o Sono tra(fra) il tavolo e la sedia » I'm between the table and the chair
o Vengo a casa tra(fra) due minuti » I'd come home in two minutes
o l'autobus passerà fra(tra) due ore » the bus will pass in two hours time
o l'albero fra(tra) le due case è alto » the tree between the two houses is tall
Italian Prepositions
Prepositions are short words which express conditions, directions, specifications, such as of, over, to, from, etc.
Prepositions are those little words that mark places in space or time. When prepositions are used together with
definite articles, the preposition and the article are sometimes condensed into a single word. When they are not
followed (and bound) to articles, they are called "simple prepositions".
Simple prepositions: They are words that aren't followed by articles. Simple prepositions are:
di (d’) » of a » to da » from, by, since
in » in con » with tra, fra » between
su » on per » for
Di: "Di" means "of", indicating possession, or "from" (to be from). Examples:
A: "A" means "to" (indirect object and movement) or "in", indicating location (cities and places).
When preposition "a" is followed by another word starting with a vowel, for mere phonetic reasons it changes to
"ad". Examples:
Da: "Da" means "since", "from" (to come from), "by" (passive) and it's used with location referring to people.
Examples:
Per: "Per" It can translate English for, to, by, or even as, according to the different use. Examples:
Tra-fra: "Tra" and "fra" mean "between" or "in" followed by a time expression. Examples:
o Sono tra(fra) il tavolo e la sedia » I'm between the table and the chair
o Vengo a casa tra(fra) due minuti » I'd come home in two minutes
o l'autobus passerà fra(tra) due ore » the bus will pass in two hours time
o l'albero fra(tra) le due case è alto » the tree between the two houses is tall
Italian Pronouns
Personal pronouns are little words that replace persons or things: he, she, they, it, me, her etc. Personal pronouns
can play the role of subjects or be in a different role. For instance, in the sentence "I eat a food", "I" is a subject,
but in the sentence "That lion wants to eat me", "me" is the object.
Other pronouns (not personal) also replace nouns, with a more specific usage. For instance, this can replace a
noun, with a meaning similar to it (or he/she), e.g. in the sentence this is good for you.
Subject Pronouns: Subject Pronouns are often omitted, since the verb form indicates the subject:
Since the endings of conjugated verb forms indicate person and number, subject pronouns may be omitted in
Italian except when necessary: (1) for clarity, (2) when modified by anche (also), or (3) when emphasis or
contrast is desired. Examples:
It and they referring to things are almost never used in Italian and need not be translated. Below you can see a
table with subject pronouns:
Personal pronouns are the only part of the sentence in which Italian makes a distinction between
masculine/feminine and neutre. Neutre gender is used for objects, plants and animals except man; but this
distinction does not cause any important change, because all other parts of the sentence (nouns, verb inflections,
adjectives, etc.) do not have a neutre gender, which is simply handled by using either masculine or feminine.
Object Pronouns: Object Pronouns are either direct or indirect, and cannot stand alone without a verb. The
direct object receives the action of the verb directly while the indirect object is indirectly affected by it.
(*) Note that second person polite form pronouns are capitalized.
1st. person mi » me ci » us
2nd. person familiar ti » you vi » you
2nd. person polite* La » you (m. and f.) Li » You (m.)
Le » You (f.)
3rd. person lo » him, it li » them (m.)
la » her it le » them (f.)
These pronouns are used as follows:
1. They stand immediately before the verb or the auxiliary verb in the compound tenses. Examples:
In a negative sentence, the word non must come before the object pronoun.
2. The object pronoun is attached to the end of an infinitive. Note that the final –e of the infinitive is dropped.
3. The Object pronouns are attached to ecco to express here I am, here you are, here he is, and so on.
o Dov’è la signorina? – Eccola! » Where is the young woman? – Here she is!
o Hai trovato le chiavi? – Sì, eccole! » Have you found the keys? – Yes, here they are!
(*) Note that second person polite form pronouns are capitalized.
mi (to/for) me ci (to/for) us
le (to/for) her, it
Le (to/for) you (formal f. & m.) Loro (to/for) you (formal f. & m.)
The direct object is governed directly by the verb, for example, in the following
statement: Romeo loved her.
The Indirect Object in an English sentence often stands where you would expect the
direct object but common sense will tell you that the direct object is later in the
sentence, e.g.: Romeo bought her a bunch of flowers.
The direct object — i.e. the thing that Romeo bought is “a bunch of flowers”; Romeo
didn't buy “her” as if she were a slave. So the pronoun her in the sentence actually
means "for her" and is the Indirect Object.
Examples:
» Voglio telefonargli
I want to phone him.
Sentence in Italian
Sentences are made up of one or more clauses. A clause consists of a subject (a noun or pronoun) and a predicate
(what is said about the noun or pronoun). The predicate always contains a verb. For example, in the simple
sentence:
The Direct Object of a verb is a noun or pronoun which receives its action. In the sentence:
Il re ama la regina » The king loves the queen.
- "regina" is the Direct Object of the verb.
Types of Sentences:
Declarative sentences are statements; these sentences are sometimes referred to as positive sentences to
distinguish them from negative sentences. Examples:
Negative Sentences
A negative sentence in Italian us usually made by adding non in front of the verb: Mi piace studiare / Non mi piace
studiare. There are of course other ways of expressing negation, as well. Here is a chart with negative expressions in
English and their Italian equivalent:
Non (Not)
Non...mai (Never)
(essi) non hanno letto nessun libro
» I'm not crazy at all, I never could fall in love with him.
Interrogatives in Italian
This is simply obtained by adding a uestion mark at the end of the sentence, while in speech only the inflection of
the voice expresses a question.
In spoken language, the question will be expressed by simply raising the pitch of the voice while approaching the
end of the sentence, especially stressing the last one or two words
The only situation in which words change order is when verb essere (to be) introduces a copula, expressing a
quality, a condition, etc. (not a direct object). The verb and the copula go before the rest of the sentence, and the
subject is postponed.
However, all of the questions above have implied either a yes or no answer. To ask questions that require more
than a yes or no answer, you generally have to use a question word. Here is a list of some English question words
and their Italian equivalents:
Che and cosa are abbreviated forms of che cosa. The forms are interchangeable:
Italian Subjunctive
The Subjunctive mood expresses doubt, uncertainty, hope, fear, possibility, opinions, etc. and is used much more
frequently in Italian. It is mainly used in dependent clauses (sentences introduced by a conjunction that do not
have a complete meaning) that are introduced by che.
Impersonal forms » è necessario che, bisogna che, è importante che... tu venga al cinema - it's necessary
that, it's important that... you come to the movie
Comparative clauses » è il film più interessante che abbia visto - it is the most interesting movie that I
saw
Sentences introduced by » affinché - perché (so that), tranne che (a part that), a meno che (unless),
sebbene - malgrado - nonostante (altough), purché - a patto che (provided that), come se (as if)
Sentences introduced by the adjectives or pronouns » qualsiasi - qualunque (any), chiunque (whoever),
dovunque (anywhere)
Sentences introduced by the adjectives or pronouns » niente che - nulla che (nothing that), nessuno che
(nobody that), l'unico/a che - il solo/a che (the only one that)
Italian subjunctive has four forms. The two first ones (Present and Imperfect Subjunctive) are simple tenses,
with their own inflections:
And the last compound tenses (congiuntivo passato and congiuntivo trapassato) are made in the same way as the
indicative ones (auxiliary verb + past participle of the main verb), though the two auxiliaries essere and avere use
subjunctive inflections.
Present Subjunctive
The present subjunctive of regular verbs is formed by dropping the normal endings, and adding these new endings:
In the other hand, most irregular verbs that change stem in the present conjugation change stem in the "congiuntivo".
The table below provides examples of three regular verbs conjugated in the present subjunctive tense.
Examples:
• Ho paura che sia troppo tardi » I am afraid it may be too late
• Credo che lavino il cane molto spesso
» I think that they wash the dog very often
• Desidero che venga con me » I want her to come with me
• Spero che prenda la giusta decisione
» I hope that he / she takes (= will take) the right decision
• Penso che dorma » I think he's sleeping
• Che abbia venduto la macchina? » I wonder if he sold his car
Imperfect Subjunctive
Is used when the action expressed in a conditional sentence is not sure: if I came...; in the case you went...; should he
call...; etc. This subjunctive is formed by adding personal endings to the imperfect stem.
For conjugations of regular verbs, the endings are identical for all three conjugations:
Examples:
Perfect Subjunctive
The Perfect subjunctive or past subjunctive ("congiuntivo passato"), is a "compound tense"
(like the "passato prossimo") because it is formed with the present subjunctive of an auxiliary
verbs ("essere" or "avere") plus the past participle of a verb.
Whether it requires "essere" or "avere", depends on the verb. If the verb is a transitive verb,
it requires the auxiliary "avere". If the verb is intransitive (like most verbs that express
movement or state of being) or if the verb is reflexive, it requires the auxiliary "essere".
Personal Auxiliar
Past Participle English
Pronoun "avere"
Personal Auxiliar
Past Participle English
Pronoun "essere"
Verbs that express movement, like "venire" (to come), "andare" (to go), "uscire" (to
go out)... require the auxiliary "essere"
Verbs that express state of being, like "essere" (to be), "stare" (to stay), "rimanere"
(to remain), "nascere" (to be born)... require the auxiliary "essere"
Examples:
Pluperfect
To complete the fourth of subjunctive-tense verb forms, there's the congiuntivo trapassato (referred to as the past perfect
subjunctive in English), which is a compound tense. Form this tense with the congiuntivo imperfetto of the auxiliary verb
avere or essere and the past participle of the acting verb.
Bellow we have a list with some examples of congiuntivo trapassato with the verbs "mangiare" (to eat), "leggere" (to
read), "andare" (to go) and "venire" (to come).
AVERE ESSERE
As well as the congiuntivo passato, the verbs "Dormire" (to sleep), "rispondere" (to answer), "viaggiare" (to travel),
"vivere" (to live) though intransitive require the auxiliary "avere" ("avessi dormito, avessi risposto, avessi viaggiato, avessi
vissuto...")
Verbs that express movement, like "venire" (to come), "andare" (to go), "uscire" (to go out)... require the auxiliary
"essere"
Verbs that express state of being, like "essere" (to be), "stare" (to stay), "rimanere" (to remain), "nascere" (to be born)...
require the auxiliary "essere"
Examples:
Coordinate conjunctions
Coordinate conjunctions (e, ma, and o) join units that are equal grammatically (fill the same position in the
sentence) or join two clauses of the same type:
The conjunctions: entrambi / e(Both / and), non solo / ma anche (Not only / but also), sia / che (Either / or) and
nè / nè (Neither / nor); serve to intensify the coordination. Examples:
Subordinate conjunctions
Subordinate conjunctions join elements of unequal rank, establishing a relation of subordination between two
phrases or clauses. Following is the list of commonly used subordinate conjunctions:
Examples:
There is no gender distinction in Italian verbs (unlike nouns, which have two genders). However, there are six
personal forms per tense (three persons: first, second, third; and two numbers: singular, plural).
Simple tenses:The simple tenses are verb tenses that consist of one word only, such as the present tense.
Compound tenses:The compound tenses (i tempi composti) are verb tenses that consist of two words,
such as the passato prossimo (present perfect).
The conjugated forms of verbs agree with the person and number of the subject. There are two numbers
(singular and plural) and three persons. First person is the speaker; second person is the one spoken to; third
person is the one spoken about. For example, for the present tense:
Present tense: The Italian present tense (presente) is happening right now. It's a simple tense—that is, the verb
form consists of one word only. Examples:
Imperfect tense: The imperfect is much more frequently used in Italian than in English. It expresses the English
"used to" and is used to describe actions or conditions that lasted an indefinite time in the past. It's also used to
express an habitual action in the past and to describe time, age, and weather in the past. Examples:
Simple Past tense: Or remote past tense (passato remoto); is a simple tense and is formed by one word. In
general, it refers to the historical past or to events that have happened in the distant past relative to the speaker.
Future tense: The future tense in Italian expresses an action that will take place in the future. Although in
English the future is expressed with the helping verb "will" or the phrase "to be going to," in Italian a verb ending
marks it as being set in the future tense.
Alla fine di settembre partirò per Roma » At the end of September I will leave for Rome
Che sarà, sarà » what will be, will be!
Present Perfect: The passato prossimo—grammatically referred to as the present perfect—is a compound tense
(tempo composto) that expresses a fact or action that happened in the recent past or that occurred long ago but
still has ties to the present. Examples:
Future perfect: The futuro anteriore or future perfect tense is a compound tense. How to express the idea of "I
will have" or "they will have"? Use future perfect tense. Examples:
Alle sette avremo già mangiato » By seven we'll already have eaten
Noi avremo parlato al padre di Anna » We will already have spoken to Anna's father
Pluperfect (past perfect tense): In English the past perfect tense (trapassato prossimo) is formed with the
auxiliary "had" + the past participle of the main verb. In Italian, the trapassato prossimo, a compound tense, is
formed with the imperfetto of the auxiliary verb avere or essere and the past participle of the acting verb.
Già erano partiti quando sono arrivato » They had already left when I arrived
Avevo chiuso le finestre quando è cominciato a piovere » I had shut the windows when it started to rain
La macchina sbandava perché aveva piovuto » The car was sliding because it had rained
Past anterior (trapassato remoto): Known in English as the preterite perfect, is used primarily in literary
contexts. It's a compound tense formed with the passato remoto of the auxiliary verb avere or essere and the past
participle of the acting verb.
To see how avere and essere conjugate in the remote past tense, see the tables below.
As you can see, in each sentence set in the trapassato remoto, you will encounter an expression of time, such as
the following: appena (scarcely), dopo che (as soon as), or finché non (up until).
Italian Conjugation
The infinitives of all Regular Verbs in Italian end in are, ere, or ire and are referred to as first, second, or third
conjugation verbs, respectively.
o amare - to love.
o temere - to fear.
o sentire - to hear.
See Italian Verbs for some examples of verb termination and features.
Below you have detailed lists with three italian regular verbs’s conjugations in the eight simple & compound
tenses: Parlare (To talk) Scrivere (To write) Dormire (To sleep) and Capire (to understand). The last one has a
different conjugation in present tense, as you can see in the first table, but is a regular verb as well.
Conjugation of irregular verbs: While the majority of Italian verbs are regular, many of the most commonly
used ones are irregular; they do not follow the regular pattern of conjugation (infinitive stem + endings). In
particular, the auxiliary verbs essere and avere, and the common modal verbs potere (ability, to be able to),
dovere (duty, to have to), stare (to stand, to be in a particular state), sapere (to know), and volere (to want to) are
all irregular.
Subordinate conjunctions
Subordinate conjunctions join elements of unequal rank, establishing a relation of subordination between two
phrases or clauses. Following is the list of commonly used subordinate conjunctions:
Examples:
There is no gender distinction in Italian verbs (unlike nouns, which have two genders).
However, there are six personal forms per tense (three persons: first, second, third; and
two numbers: singular, plural).
Simple tenses:The simple tenses are verb tenses that consist of one word only,
such as the present tense.
The conjugated forms of verbs agree with the person and number of the subject.
There are two numbers (singular and plural) and three persons. First person is the
speaker; second person is the one spoken to; third person is the one spoken about. For
example, for the present tense:
Italian Verbs
A verb is a part of speech that usually denotes action (bring, read), occurrence (to decompose (itself), to glitter),
or a state of being (exist, live, soak, stand).
Depending on the language, a verb may vary in form according to many factors, possibly including its tense,
aspect, mood and voice. It may also agree with the person, gender, and/or number of some of its arguments (what
we usually call subject, object, etc.). Examples:
In Italian, most verbs end in a common pattern, such as -are, -ere, and -ire. These are the 1st, 2nd and 3rd
conjugations respectively. Examples:
to to to to
parlare scrivere dormire finire
speak write sleep finish
to to to to
cantare vedere partire colpire
sing see leave hit
to to to to
lavorare vendere aprire costruire
work sell open build
to to to to
amare vivere servire sparire
love live serve disappear
The features of the verbs are:
(*) There are few verbs of the -ire conjugation in Italian that have different suffix.
Italian Expressions
In every language we find the so-called 'idiomatic expressions', which are sentences characteristic for their
expressiveness; they are difficult to translate literally or rationally.