| Welcome to Can-Do Italian by ItalianPod101.com. |
| In this lesson, you’ll learn how to ask for something at a grocery store in Italian. |
| For example, "This, please." is |
| Questo, per favore. |
| Adam Russo is at a small grocery store. |
| After finding something he wants, he points at the item and asks for it. |
| Before you hear the conversation, let's learn some of its key components. |
| questo |
| "this" |
| questo |
| questo |
| prego |
| "here you are" |
| prego |
| prego |
| Questo, per favore. |
| Prego! |
| Once more with the English translation. |
| Questo, per favore. |
| "This, please." |
| Prego! |
| "Here you are!" |
| Let's break down the conversation. |
| Do you remember how Adam Russo says, |
| "This, please." |
| Questo, per favore. |
| This standard way of asking for something follows a simple pattern. |
| First is questo. "This." Questo. Questo. |
| Questo is the masculine, singular form of the word for “this.” If you don’t know the name of an item and consequently its gender, you can use questo. |
| It refers to something which is near the speaker. Adam uses it because he’s pointing at something which is near to him. |
| Next is per favore. "Please." Per favore. Per favore. |
| All together, it's Questo, per favore. "This, please." |
| Questo, per favore. |
| Do you remember how the clerk says, |
| "Here you are." |
| Prego. |
| Prego literally means, " pray," but it translates as "Here you are," in this situation. Prego. Prego. |
| Note: Prego has multiple meanings depending on the situation. |
| For example, Prego means "You’re welcome" after someone says "Thank you," grazie. |
| It can also mean "How can I help you," in a shop or business; "Come in" when inviting someone into a room; or "After you" when you'd like to offer someone the chance to go first. |
| In this case, the word is used as an invitation to take something. "Here you are. Go ahead." |
| Prego is from the verb, pregare. "To pray." Pregare. |
| Prego. "Here you are," in this case. |
| Prego. |
| The pattern is: |
| ITEM, per favore. |
| ITEM, "please." |
| ITEM, per favore. |
| To use this pattern, simply replace the ITEM placeholder with the thing you want. |
| Note: This pattern requires a demonstrative pronoun, which is determined by the location, gender and the number of the desired item. |
| Imagine you’d like something from across the room. The pronoun to indicate something far from a speaker is quello, "that." Quello. Quello. |
| Say |
| "That, please." |
| Ready? |
| Quello, per favore. |
| "That, please." |
| Quello, per favore. |
| The phrases, Questo, per favore, and Quello, per favore can be used to refer to an item without knowing its name in Italian. |
| If you don’t know the name of an item and consequently its gender, you can use these masculine pronouns. |
| For items that are plural, use questi, or "these," as the default. Questi. |
| Use quelli, or "those," for things that are far from you. Quelli. |
| Remember, these can be used to refer to an item without knowing its name in Italian. |
| Again, the key pattern is |
| ITEM, per favore. |
| ITEM, "please." |
| ITEM, per favore. |
| Let’s look at some more examples. |
| Listen and repeat or speak along with the native speakers. |
| Questo, per favore. |
| "This, please." |
| Questo, per favore. |
| Quello, per favore. |
| "That, please." |
| Quello, per favore. |
| Questi, per favore. |
| "These, please." |
| Questi, per favore. |
| Quelli, per favore. |
| "Those, please." |
| Quelli, per favore. |
| Questo e quello, per favore. |
| "This and that, please." |
| Questo e quello, per favore. |
| Did you notice how the last speaker used a different sentence pattern? |
| Questo e quello, per favore. |
| “This and that, please.” Questo e quello, per favore. |
| He used the words Quello and questo together. |
| Questo. "This." Questo. |
| Quello. "That." Quello. |
| When requesting multiple items, you can join them with the conjunction, e, meaning "and." |
| E. "And." E. |
| The pattern is |
| ITEM e ITEM, per favore. |
| ITEM and ITEM, please. |
| Let’s review the key words. |
| Quello. |
| "That." |
| Quello. Quello |
| Questi. |
| "These." |
| Questi. Questi. |
| Quelli. |
| "Those." |
| Quelli. Quelli. |
| Let's review. |
| Respond to the prompts by speaking aloud. Then repeat after the native speakers, focusing on pronunciation. |
| Ready? |
| Do you remember how to say "please?" |
| Per favore. |
| Per favore. |
| Do you remember how Adam says, |
| "This, please." |
| Questo, per favore. |
| Questo, per favore. |
| Do you remember how the clerk says, |
| "Here you are!" |
| Prego! |
| Prego! |
| When you don't know the name of something, do you remember the word for “that?” |
| Quello. |
| Quello. |
| When you don’t know the name of something, do you remember the word for “these?” |
| Questi. |
| Questi. |
| Let's practice. |
| Imagine you’re Adam. You’re at the grocery store to buy some bread, but you don't know the word. Instead you point at it and say, "this" or questo. |
| Ready? |
| Questo, per favore. |
| Prego! |
| Listen again and repeat. |
| Questo, per favore. |
| Questo, per favore. |
| Let's try another. |
| Imagine you’re Isabella , and you see some small snacks you’d like to try. |
| Ask for "these," or questi. |
| Ready? |
| Questi, per favore. |
| Prego! |
| Listen again and repeat. |
| Questi, per favore. |
| Questi, per favore. |
| Let’s try one more. |
| Imagine you’re Emily , and you see a sandwich in the showcase far away. |
| Ask for "that," or quello. |
| Ready? |
| Quello, per favore. |
| Prego! |
| Listen again and repeat. |
| Quello, per favore. |
| Quello, per favore. |
| This is the end of this lesson. |
| In this lesson, you learned how to request something by pointing, an essential skill for shopping at a grocery store. |
| Remember, these Can Do lessons are about learning practical language skills. |
| What's next? |
| Show us what you can do. |
| When you're ready, take your assessment. |
| You can take it again and again, so try anytime you like. |
| Our teachers will assess it, and give you your results. |
| Keep practicing — and move on to the next lesson! |
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