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Ballare is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "to dance." There are two imperfect tenses in Italian, one in the indicative and the other in the subjunctive. Following is the conjugation of ballare in both imperfect tenses:IndicativeIo ballavoTu ballaviLui/lei/Lei ballavaNoi ballavamoVoi ballavateLoro/loro/essi ballavanoSubjunctiveIo ballassiTu ballassiLui/lei/Lei ballasseNoi ballassimoVoi ballasteLoro/loro/essi ballassero
The past participle of begin is begun and the past tense is began. For example:'I have just begun to study Italian.''I began to study Italian last week.'
L'hai saputi! and Lo sapevi! are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "You knew it!"Specifically, the masculine pronoun lo* is "it" in this context. The present perfect auxiliary hai and past participle saputo literally mean "(informal singular you) have known" here. The imperfect sapevi translates as "(informal singular you) did know, knew, used to know."Which one to use depends upon the situation. The imperfect describes what is known at a certain point in time. The present perfect indicates that what is known still is so.The respective pronunciations will be "LEYE sa-POO-to" and "lo sa-PEY-vee" in Italian.
Infanzia is an Italian equivalent of the English word "childhood." The feminine singular noun in question also may be translated into English as "infancy." The pronunciation will be "een-FAN-tsya" in Italian.
Venuto is the past participle of the Italian word venire.Specifically, the word venire is the present infinitive. Without additional information or the context, the past participle is considered venuto, which is pronounced "vey-NOO-toh". This is the past participle in its masculine singular form.The other three possible forms of the past participle are feminine singular venuta, feminine plural venute, and masculine plural venuti.
An Italian slang term describing black males with shaved heads. This term apparently came about when someone compared them to an eggplant in appearance Mulie being a short term for the Italian word describing an eggplant.
Obtained... It's the past participle of the verb ottenere which is to obtain
"Golden" is an English equivalent of the Italian word dorati. The masculine plural adjective/past participle also means "gilded." The pronunciation will be "do-RA-tee" in Italian.
Eri il mio amico d'infanzia!
Saltando is an Italian equivalent of the English word "jumping."Specifically, the Italian word is a verb. It is the present participle of the infinitve saltare ("to jump, to leap"). The pronunciation is "sahl-TAHN-doh."
"Jumping" is an English equivalent of the Italian word saltando.Specifically, the Italian word is a verb. It is the present participle of the infinitive saltare ("to jump, to leap"). The pronunciation is "sahl-TAHN-doh."
Torturato is one Italian equivalent of 'tortured'. It's the past participle of the verb 'torturare', which means 'to torture'. The feminine equivalent is 'torturata'.If the torture is emotional or psychological, the Italian equivalent also may be tormentato. It's the past participle of the verb 'tormentare', which means 'to irritate, torment, vex, worry'. The feminine equivalent is 'tormentata'.