Dialogue

Lesson Transcript

Do you know how to describe past habits or continuous situations in Italian?
Welcome to Three Step Italian Practice by ItalianPod101.com. In this lesson, you will practice conjugating verbs in the imperfect tense.
Let's look at the main dialogue.
Two people are having a conversation.
Questo sei tu da giovane? Che bel ragazzo!
"Is this you when you were young? What a handsome guy!"
Eh sì, ero molto bello. Avevo ventidue anni. Ero uno studente dell'università. Andavo tutti i giorni in palestra.
"Oh yes, I was very handsome. I was twenty-two years old. I was a university student. I used to go to the gym every day."
Ero, avevo, Ero, Andavo
In the dialogue, we heard several verbs in the imperfetto tense — like ero, avevo, and andavo.
The imperfetto is used to describe how things were in the past: habits, age, feelings, and ongoing situations.
It's often translated as "used to" or "was or were doing" in English.
To form the imperfetto, we take the stem of the verb and add specific endings that match the subject. These endings help show who was doing the action and give a sense of continuity or repetition in the past.
Let's take a look at a few examples. All of these verbs are in the first-person singular form.
andavo comes from andare — the stem and- plus -avo gives "I used to go."
avevo comes from avere — the stem av- plus -evo gives "I used to have."
ero comes from essere, which is irregular. Even though it doesn't follow the regular pattern, ero still marks the first-person singular form — "I was."
These conjugations allow us to describe experiences, routines, and conditions that lasted over time.
Let's now take a closer look at how those endings work!

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