Lesson Transcript

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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