Dialogue

Vocabulary

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Lesson Notes

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Lesson Transcript

INTRODUCTION
Cinzia: Ciao a tutti!
Marco: Marco here! Beginner series Season 1, Lesson 22 - You “Don’t Like” What the Italian Hairdresser Did to Your Hair?
Cinzia: Hello, everyone! I’m Cinzia and welcome to ItalianPod101.
Marco: With us, you’ll learn to speak Italian with fun and effective lessons.
Cinzia: We also provide you with cultural insights…
Marco: And tips you won’t find in a textbook. In this lesson, you will continue to study how to use the verb "piacere."
Cinzia: This conversation takes place in a bar.
Marco: And it’s between Luca and Elena.
Cinzia: They are friends, therefore they will be speaking in informal Italian.
Marco: Now, before we listen to the conversation…
Cinzia: We want to ask…
Marco: Do you read the lesson notes while you listen?
Cinzia: We received an email about the study tip.
Marco: So, we were wondering if you’ve tried it. And if so..
Cinzia: What do you think of it?
Marco: You can leave us feedback in the comment section of this lesson.
Cinzia: Okay, let’s listen to the conversation.
DIALOGUE
Elena: Ciao Luca. Mi piace il tuo nuovo taglio di capelli!
Luca: Oh grazie, ma a me non piace.
Elena: Perché? È così selvaggio e… interessante.
Luca: Sei troppo gentile. Il parrucchiere è bravo, ma non mi piace il taglio. È troppo corto.
Marco: Let's hear it slowly now.
Cinzia: Ascoltiamolo lentamente.
Elena: Ciao Luca. Mi piace il tuo nuovo taglio di capelli!
Luca: Oh grazie, ma a me non piace.
Elena: Perché? È così selvaggio e… interessante.
Luca: Sei troppo gentile. Il parrucchiere è bravo, ma non mi piace il taglio. È troppo corto.
Marco: And now, with the translation.
Cinzia: E ora, con la traduzione.
Elena: Ciao Luca. Mi piace il tuo nuovo taglio di capelli!
Elena: Hi, Luca. I love your new hairstyle!
Luca: Oh grazie, ma a me non piace.
Luca: Oh, thanks. But I don't like it.
Elena: Perché? È così selvaggio e… interessante.
Elena: Why? It’s so wild and…interesting.
Luca: Sei troppo gentile. Il parrucchiere è bravo, ma non mi piace il taglio. È troppo corto.
Luca: You're too kind. The hairdresser is good, but I don't like the haircut. It's too short.
POST CONVERSATION BANTER
Marco: Now, this was a pretty straightforward dialogue, wasn’t it?
Cinzia: Yes, but I find some differences between English and Italian.
Marco: And where are they?
Cinzia: In the Italian dialogue, we have “mi piace,” and in the English dialogue, we have “I love” as the translation of mi piace.
Marco: True, true! The closest translation would be “I like.”
Cinzia: Yes, but we often use mi piace even with the same meaning that the English have with “I love.”
Marco: Yes. It’s a little bit more than- well, sometimes, a lot more than just to like something. It comes really from the heart. It’s, oh, I really love that new gadget or whatever it is that we like.
Cinzia: Maybe “I love” could be translated like mi piace molto.
Marco: “I like a lot.” Because in Italian, the direct translation of “to love,” that is amare, that we have already seen in previous lesson is more love, real love.
Cinzia: amore
Marco: Exactly.
Cinzia: So we use it, for example, to say ti amo.
Marco: “I love you,” exactly! So, in this case, we would prefer to use mi piace.
Cinzia: Come on, come on, Marco, let’s move in the vocabulary.
Marco: Okay. So, let’s take a look at today’s vocabulary.
VOCAB LIST
Marco: First…
Cinzia: tuo [natural native speed]
Marco: your
Cinzia: tuo [slowly - broken down by syllable] tuo [natural native speed]
Marco: Next
Cinzia: nuovo [natural native speed]
Marco: new
Cinzia: nuovo [slowly - broken down by syllable] nuovo [natural native speed]
Marco: Next
Cinzia: taglio di capelli [natural native speed]
Marco: haircut
Cinzia: taglio di capelli [slowly - broken down by syllable] taglio di capelli [natural native speed]
Marco: Next
Cinzia: selvaggio [natural native speed]
Marco: wild, uncivilized, primitive
Cinzia: selvaggio [slowly - broken down by syllable] selvaggio [natural native speed]
Marco: Next
Cinzia: interessante [natural native speed]
Marco: interesting
Cinzia: interessante [slowly - broken down by syllable] interessante [natural native speed]
Marco: Next
Cinzia: gentile [natural native speed]
Marco: kind, nice, polite
Cinzia: gentile [slowly - broken down by syllable] gentile [natural native speed]
Marco: Next
Cinzia: troppo [natural native speed]
Marco: too much
Cinzia: troppo [slowly - broken down by syllable] troppo [natural native speed]
Marco: Next
Cinzia: parrucchiere [natural native speed]
Marco: hairdresser
Cinzia: parrucchiere [slowly - broken down by syllable] parrucchiere [natural native speed]
Marco: Next
Cinzia: corto [natural native speed]
Marco: short
Cinzia: corto [slowly - broken down by syllable] corto [natural native speed]
VOCAB AND PHRASE USAGE
Marco: Okay.
Cinzia: And now, let’s take a look at the usage for some of the words and expressions. The first expression we will look at is taglio di capelli.
Marco: And the first example is…
Cinzia: Quel taglio di capelli è fuori moda.
Marco: “"That haircut is out of fashion."
Cinzia: So, we have only one English word, “haircut” to translate this expression in Italian.
Marco: Yes, yes. And this expression is divided in taglio, di, and then capelli. But taglio also has other meanings, right?
Cinzia: Taglio can mean “cut” or “wound.”
Marco: Or it can mean also “the cut of a dress,” il taglio di un vestito.
Cinzia: The word taglio can be used in different cases, but in this one, it’s referred to hair. Please remember that hair is singular in English, but capelli is plural.
Marco: Because “one hair” in Italian would be…
Cinzia: un capello
Marco: Exactly. I still have enough hair in my head, so I don’t need to say that.
Cinzia: So, we could say capelli.
Marco: Exactly.
Cinzia: Okay. Let’s move on to the next word, which is selvaggio.
Marco: Why are you laughing at selvaggio?
Cinzia: Oh, I love this word.
Marco: Okay, so give us a very, very good example.
Cinzia: La lince è un animale selvaggio.
Marco: "The lynx is a wild animal." Oh come on, I wanted something more interesting!
Cinzia: For something more interesting, um…
Marco: We can’t.
Cinzia: No way, Marco, I’m sorry.
Marco: Okay, let’s move on.
Cinzia: And the next word we will look at is interessante.
Marco: One example sentence, please.
Cinzia: Questa conferenza è molto interessante.
Marco: "This conference is very interesting."
Cinzia: Next word is gentile.
Marco: And the example sentence is…
Cinzia: È molto gentile da parte tua.
Marco: "That's very kind of you."
Cinzia: The next word is parrucchiere.
Marco: And the example sentence is…
Cinzia: Vado dal parrucchiere prima del matrimonio.
Marco: I’m going to the hairdresser before the wedding.”
Cinzia: Oh!
Marco: Not met.
Cinzia: Me neither.
Marco: Okay. Come on, one last example.
Cinzia: Okay. And the next and the last word is corto.
Marco: And the example is…
Cinzia: Quella gonna è corta.
Marco: That skirt is short.
Cinzia: And now, let’s take a look at the grammar.

Lesson focus

Cinzia: In today’s dialogue, we will actually review mi piace because we have already seen it, Marco, do you remember?
Marco: Yes, but in today’s dialogue, we also had the negative form.
Cinzia: Bravo, Marco. Vedo che stai attento oggi.
Marco: Not too much though. Wait, vedo che stai attento means “I see that you’re paying attention.”
Cinzia: Okay. So, the negative form of mi piace is very easy, Marco, isn’t it?
Marco: It is, it is! How do we make it?
Cinzia: We just add non before mi piace.
Marco: Okay, so examples, examples!
Cinzia: Let’s see first the affirmative sentence. Mi piacciono i gatti.
Marco: “I like cats.”
Cinzia: The negative sentence is - Non mi piacciono i gatti.
Marco: "I don't like cats."
Cinzia: Dear listeners, it’s so easy. We just added non.
Marco: Yes, very, very easy. And now, to make this lesson a little bit more interesting, let’s read a small list of common adjectives we can use with hairstyle.
Cinzia: Oh, yes, yes, I like it.
Marco: And they’re all in the plural form. Since like we said before, the noun capelli is plural.
Cinzia: lunghi
Marco: “long”
Cinzia: corti
Marco: “short”
Cinzia: Something about color.
Marco: Okay.
Cinzia: marroni
Marco: “brown”
Cinzia: biondi
Marco: “blonde”
Cinzia: “black”
Marco: neri
Cinzia: Yes! And what else can we say?
Marco: Well, there’s one more color that’s very, well, not many people have this color and it’s “red.”
Cinzia: Oh, rossi.
Marco: Yes. Do you like capelli selvaggi?
Cinzia: Oh yes, I have capelli capelli selvaggi, actually.
Marco: You have “wild hair”?
Cinzia: Yes.
Marco: So, your hair decides its own hairstyle every morning, right?
Cinzia: But it’s just because it’s natural.
Marco: Okay. What about ruffled hair?
Cinzia: No, no, no! Wait, wait, wait, Marco. What about a person who is bold? How do you say it in Italian.
Marco: “Bold” is calvo. That means “bold person” (male).
Cinzia: And then we have pettinati.
Marco: “well-combed”
Cinzia: And spettinati
Marco: “ruffled”

Outro

Cinzia: That’s it for today’s lesson. Thank you!
Marco: And thank us all!
Cinzia: Ciao!
Marco, Ciao, ciao!

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