Dialogue

Vocabulary

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Lesson Notes

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Lesson Transcript

INTRODUCTION
Marco: Hello, and welcome to the Beginner Series S2 at ItalianPOD101.com, where we study modern Italian in a fun, educational format!
Cinzia: So, brush up on the Italian that you started learning long ago, or start learning today.
Marco: Thanks for being here with us for this lesson. Cinzia, what are we looking at in this lesson.
Marco: In this lesson we wil learn how to use of the condizionale passato in expressing the future in the past
Cinzia: This conversation takes place on the streets of Italy
Marco: And it is between Luca and Peter
Cinzia: They are friends, therefore they will be speaking informal Italian
Marco: Basic and Premium members....
Cinzia: if you have a 3G phone...
Marco: you can see the Lesson Notes in your favorite browser on your phone!
Cinzia: Stop by ItalianPOD101.com to find out more.
Marco: Let's listen to the conversation.
DIALOGUE
Peter: È dalla stazione di servizio che sei triste.
Luca: Odio essere in ritardo. Mentre aspettavamo Anna ed Elena, sapevo che saremmo arrivati in ritardo.
Peter: Non essere giù, non è una cosa grave.
Luca: Hai ragione. Inoltre oggi è un giorno per festeggiare.
Peter: Bravo!
Luca: Andiamo a salutare gli altri.
English Host: Let’s hear the conversation one time slowly.
Peter: È dalla stazione di servizio che sei triste.
Luca: Odio essere in ritardo. Mentre aspettavamo Anna ed Elena, sapevo che saremmo arrivati in ritardo.
Peter: Non essere giù, non è una cosa grave.
Luca: Hai ragione. Inoltre oggi è un giorno per festeggiare.
Peter: Bravo!
Luca: Andiamo a salutare gli altri.
English Host: Now let’s hear it with the English translation.
Peter: È dalla stazione di servizio che sei triste.
Marco: It’s from the service station that you are sad.
Luca: Odio essere in ritardo. Mentre aspettavamo Anna ed Elena, sapevo che saremmo arrivati in ritardo.
Marco: I hate being late. While we were waiting for Anna and Elena, I knew we’d arrive late.
Peter: Non essere giù, non è una cosa grave.
Marco: Don’t be depressed. It’s not something serious.
Luca: Hai ragione. Inoltre oggi è un giorno per festeggiare.
Marco: You are right. Besides, today is a day to celebrate.
Peter: Bravo!
Marco: Good!
Luca: Andiamo a salutare gli altri.
Marco: Let’s go say hi to the others.
POST CONVERSATION BANTER
Cinzia: Peter is right, no one should be sad on the day of a wedding.
Marco: You are absolutely right, by the way when are you going to get married?
Cinzia: Me? Married? Hmmm.
Marco: She is thinking about it, she is…
Cinzia: I’m not going to get married soon, so you can relax.
Marco: And I had thought we had a nice scoop!
VOCAB LIST
Marco: Let's take a look at the vocabulary for this lesson.
The first word we shall see is:
Cinzia: triste [natural native speed]
Marco: sad, gloomy, unhappy
Cinzia: triste [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Cinzia: triste [natural native speed]
: Next:
Cinzia: odiare [natural native speed]
Marco: to hate, to loathe, to detest
Cinzia: odiare [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Cinzia: odiare [natural native speed]
: Next:
Cinzia: essere giù [natural native speed]
Marco: to be down, to be depressed, to be run down
Cinzia: essere giù [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Cinzia: essere giù [natural native speed]
: Next:
Cinzia: inoltre [natural native speed]
Marco: furthermore, besides, moreover, also, what’s more
Cinzia: inoltre [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Cinzia: inoltre [natural native speed]
: Next:
Cinzia: festeggiare [natural native speed]
Marco: to celebrate
Cinzia: festeggiare [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Cinzia: festeggiare [natural native speed]
: Next:
Cinzia: bravo [natural native speed]
Marco: good, clever, smart, skilled
Cinzia: bravo [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Cinzia: bravo [natural native speed]
VOCAB AND PHRASE USAGE
Marco: Let's have a closer look at the usuage for some of the words and phrases from this lesson.
Cinzia: The first word we will look at is
triste
Marco: And the sample sentence is?
Cinzia: Non essere triste.
Marco: Don’t be sad.
Cinzia: The next word/expression we will look at is
odiare
Marco: And the sample sentence is?
Cinzia: Odio andare a scuola!
Marco: I hate going to school.
Cinzia: The next word/expression we will look at is
essere giù
Marco: And the sample sentence is?
Cinzia: Sei sempre giù.
Marco: You are always depressed.
Cinzia: The next word/expression we will look at is
inoltre
Marco: And the sample sentence is?
Cinzia: Inoltre vorrei ringraziare Anna.
Marco: Furthermore I’d like to thank Anna.
Cinzia: The next word/expression we will look at is
festeggiare
Marco: And the sample sentence is?
Cinzia: Domani sera festeggiamo il compleanno di Lucia.
Marco: Tomorrow evening we are celebrating Lucia’s birthday.
Cinzia: Today's last word/expression is
bravo
Marco: And the sample sentence is?
Cinzia: Sei molto brava a disegnare.
Marco: You are very good at drawing.

Lesson focus

Marco: The principal usage of the past conditional is to express future events in the past, following the tense agreement of past tenses.
Cinzia: This use is different from English as we would use the present conditional instead.
Marco: In this type of usage, a verb conjugated in the past tense always precedes the past conditional. For instance
Cinzia: Mentre pensavo alla mia ragazza sapevo che mi avrebbe chiamato.
Marco: While I was thinking about my girlfriend, I knew she would call me.
Cinzia: I passeggeri aspettavano sul treno, sapendo che sarebbero arrivati in ritardo.
Marco: The passengers were waiting on the train, knowing they'd arrive late.
Cinzia: Anche se non aveva prove, Antonio sentiva che avrebbe vinto la partita.
Marco: Even though he didn't have any proof, Antonio felt he'd win the match."
Cinzia: We obtain the past conditional of verbs that require the auxiliary verb avere in the following way
Marco: Subject + auxiliary verb (present conditional) + main verb (past participle)
Cinzia: Note that the past participle of main verbs that require the auxiliary verb avere never change their form according to the subject they refer to.
Marco: For example
Cinzia: Io avrei comprato una casa.
Marco: I would have bought a house.
Cinzia: Noi avremmo comprato una casa.
Marco: We would have bought a house.
Cinzia: let us now see the Condizionale Passato conjugation of the verb giocare
Marco: to play
Cinzia: this verb requires the auxiliary avere
Cinzia: Io avrei giocato
Marco: "I would have played"
Cinzia: Io avresti giocato
Marco: "You would have played"
Cinzia: Lui/lei avrebbe giocato
Marco: "He/she/it would have played"
Cinzia: Noi avremmo giocato
Marco: "We would have played"
Cinzia: Voi avreste giocato
Marco: "You would have played"
Cinzia: Loro avrebbero giocato
Marco: "They would have played"

Outro

Marco: That just about does it for today.
Marco: Testing yourself is one of the most effective ways to learn.
Cinzia: That's why we have 3 types of quizzes.
Marco: Vocabulary, grammar, and content specific.
Cinzia: Each quiz targets specific skill...
Marco: And together these quizzes will help you
master several fundamental skills. :
Cinzia: You can find them in the learning center at
Marco: ItalianPod101.com
Marco: Arrivederci!
Cinzia: A presto!

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