Let's look at the sentence pattern. |
This pattern is the structure that all of our examples will follow. |
[Imperative verb] + [complement] |
Let's look at the elements in this pattern. |
First is the verb in the imperative form. |
Next is the complement, which in our sentences is the object—the thing that receives the action. |
This might be a noun or a noun phrase, and it often includes an article, such as il, "the," masculine singular, la, "the," feminine singular, or le, "the," feminine plural. |
Let's see how a line from the dialogue follows this pattern. |
Lava le melanzane. |
"Wash the eggplants." |
First is the verb lava, which is the informal imperative form of the verb lavare, meaning "to wash." |
To form the imperative for regular -are verbs like lavare, when speaking to one person informally, the tu form, you remove the -are ending from the infinitive and add -a. |
So, lavare becomes lava. This form is used to give a direct instruction or request, such as telling someone to wash something. |
Next is the article le, which is the definite article meaning "the." It's used here in its feminine plural form because it refers to melanzane, a feminine plural noun. |
Then we have the noun melanzane, meaning "eggplants." This is the object of the verb—the thing being washed—so it functions as the complement in the sentence. |
All together, it's Lava le melanzane. "Wash the eggplants." Lava le melanzane. |
This sentence is a clear example of the [imperative verb] + [complement] pattern. |
In Italian, the imperative is used to give commands, instructions, or make a request. |
When speaking informally to one person, regular verbs change their endings depending on their conjugation group. |
Verbs ending in -are, like parlare "to speak," take the ending -a in the informal tu form—parla! "speak!" |
Verbs ending in -ere, like scrivere "to write," |
and those ending in -ire, like dormire "to sleep," both take the ending -i—scrivi! "write!," dormi! "sleep!." |
Now you can use this structure to give simple instructions or requests when speaking informally in Italian. |
The informal negative imperative in Italian has a special rule, especially when you're talking to tu (you, singular informal). Here's how it works: |
For tu (you, informal), the negative imperative is formed using: |
non + infinitive of the verb |
So instead of conjugating the verb, you leave it in the infinitive form after non. |
Examples: |
Non parlare! – "Don't speak!" |
Non mangiare! – "Don't eat!" |
Non aprire la finestra! – "Don't open the window!" |
Even though these are commands, the verbs stay in their dictionary form. |
Now let's look at some speaking examples. |
Mettilo nella borsa. |
"Put it in the bag." |
Can you see how the pattern applies here? |
Let's break it down: |
Here, Mettilo is the imperative verb with the direct object pronoun attached. |
Metti is the imperative form of the verb mettere, meaning "put." Lo is the pronoun "it," attached directly to the verb. |
So we have the full command, Mettilo, meaning "put it." |
Next is the prepositional phrase nella borsa, which acts as the complement. |
Nella is a contraction of in + la, meaning "in the" for a feminine singular noun. |
Borsa means "bag." |
So, Mettilo nella borsa follows the pattern [Imperative verb] + [complement] perfectly. |
It gives a clear command, specifying what to do and where. |
All together, it's Mettilo nella borsa. |
"Put it in the bag." |
Here's another example |
Scrivi il messaggio nel libro. |
"Write the message in the book." |
Scrivi il messaggio nel libro. |
"Write the message in the book." |
Let's try one more, |
Leggi il testo adesso. |
"Read the text now." |
Leggi il testo adesso. |
"Read the text now." |
Another one. |
Metti i bicchieri sul tavolo. |
"Put the glasses on the table." |
Metti i bicchieri sul tavolo. |
"Put the glasses on the table." |
One last example. |
Cancella la frase dalla lavagna. |
"Erase the sentence from the board." |
Cancella la frase dalla lavagna. |
"Erase the sentence from the board." |
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