Let's look at the sentence pattern. |
Do you remember how the character said, |
"Yes, I received an email yesterday." |
Sì, ho ricevuto un'e-mail ieri. |
Sì, ho ricevuto un'e-mail ieri. |
This sentence follows the pattern here: |
(subject) + present of avere + past participle |
(subject) + present of "to have" + past participle |
This pattern is used to describe completed actions in the past — things that happened once and are now finished. |
It's formed with: |
a subject, |
the present tense of the verb avere "to have," |
and the past participle of the main verb. |
Here's how the line from the dialogue uses the pattern: |
Sì, ho ricevuto un'e-mail ieri. |
"Yes, I received an email yesterday." |
Let's break it down: |
Sì, meaning "yes," |
ho, the first-person singular present of avere, meaning "I have," |
ricevuto, the past participle of ricevere, meaning "received," |
un'e-mail, meaning "an email," |
ieri, meaning "yesterday." |
So this sentence uses the passato prossimo, the "past participle" with avere to report a completed past action — the action of receiving the email is finished and happened at a specific point in time: yesterday. |
Now you can use this structure to talk about what you did, received, or completed in the past in Italian! |
And here's something that helps you recognize the past participle of regular verbs. |
Italian verbs have different endings in their infinitive forms — like -are, -ere, and -ire. |
To form the past participle, we just change those endings: |
For -are verbs, we change it to -ato. |
Like accettare becomes accettato — "accepted." |
For -ere verbs, we use -uto. |
So ricevere becomes ricevuto — "received." |
And for -ire verbs, we use -ito. |
For example, finire becomes finito — "finished." |
So when you hear ho ricevuto, you can tell right away: |
ho is "I have," and ricevuto is "received." |
Together, "I have received" — or simply, "I received." |
You'll see this pattern again and again as you describe completed actions in the past. |
Apart from these forms, the past participle of irregular verbs is different. Check the Lesson Notes on our website for all the variants. |
Now let's look at some speaking examples. |
Io e mio figlio abbiamo guardato la partita insieme. |
"My son and I watched the match together." |
Can you see how the pattern applies here? |
Let's break it down: |
Io e mio figlio |
"My son and I" — this is the subject of the sentence. It's a compound subject, so the verb agrees in the first-person plural (we). |
abbiamo |
"we have" — this is the present tense of the verb avere, used as the auxiliary verb. |
guardato |
"watched" — this is the past participle of the regular -are verb guardare. |
la partita |
"the match" — it's the thing they watched. |
insieme |
"together" — this tells us how the action was done. |
So the full sentence follows the pattern: |
(subject) + present of avere + past participle |
In this case: |
Io e mio figlio (subject) + abbiamo (present of avere) + guardato (past participle) |
This structure is used to describe a completed action in the past — in this case, watching the match. |
Here's another example |
Ho venduto la mia vecchia bicicletta. |
"I sold my old bicycle." |
Ho venduto la mia vecchia bicicletta. |
"I sold my old bicycle." |
Let's try one more, |
Le mie amiche hanno comprato i biglietti per il concerto. |
"My friends bought the tickets for the concert." |
Le mie amiche hanno comprato i biglietti per il concerto. |
"My friends bought the tickets for the concert." |
Another one. |
Ieri ho letto un articolo interessante sull'economia italiana. |
"Yesterday I read an interesting article about the Italian economy." |
Here, letto is the past participle of the irregular verb leggere, meaning "to read." |
Ieri ho letto un articolo interessante sull'economia italiana. |
"Yesterday I read an interesting article about the Italian economy." |
One last example. |
Hai scritto un'e-mail a INNOVA? |
"Did you write an email to INNOVA?" |
In this sentence, we see scritto, which is again the past participle of an irregular verb; scrivere, meaning "to write." Make sure to check the list of irregular verbs on our website! |
Hai scritto un'e-mail a INNOVA? |
"Did you write an email to INNOVA?" |
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