Lesson Transcript

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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