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1 ♦ singular
♦ singular /ˈsɪŋgjʊlə(r)/A a.1 singolare; unico; solo; straordinario; insolito; bizzarro; strano: singular beauty, bellezza singolare (o straordinaria); a man of singular tastes, un uomo di gusti singolari; a singular specimen, un solo esemplare; singular clothes, abiti bizzarri; vestiti straniB n.(gramm.) singolare: a noun in the singular, un nome al singolare. -
2 singular
['sɪŋgjʊlə(r)] 1.1) ling. [noun, verb] (al) singolare; [form, ending] del singolare2) (strange) singolare2.nome ling. singolare m.* * *['siŋɡjulə]1) (( also adjective) (in) the form of a word which expresses only one: `Foot' is the singular of `feet'; a singular noun/verb; The noun `foot' is singular.) singolare2) (the state of being singular: Is this noun in the singular or the plural?) singolare* * *['sɪŋgjʊlə(r)] 1.1) ling. [noun, verb] (al) singolare; [form, ending] del singolare2) (strange) singolare2.nome ling. singolare m. -
3 singular sin·gu·lar
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4 singular noun
nGram sostantivo singolare -
5 you
[ forma debole jʊ] [ forma forte juː]1) (subject, vocative) (singular: informal) tu; (singular: polite) lei; (plural: informal) voi; (plural: polite) loroyou've seen it — l'hai visto, l'ha visto, lo avete visto, l'hanno visto
here you are — eccoti, ecco a lei, eccovi, ecco a loro
I love ballet but you don't — io amo il balletto ma tu, lei, voi, loro no
you and I went to the concert — io e te, io e lei, io e voi andammo al concerto
you who... — tu, lei, voi, loro che...
you who see — tu che vedi, lei che vede, voi che vedete, loro che vedono
oh, it's you Ann — ah, sei tu, Ann
if I were you... — se fossi in te, al tuo posto
3) (direct object) (singular: informal) ti, te; (singular: polite) la, lei; (plural: informal) vi, voi; (plural: polite) li, loroI saw you on Monday — ti ho visto, l'ho vista, vi, li ho visti lunedì; (emphatic) ho visto te, lei, voi, loro lunedì
I know you, not him — conosco te, lei, voi, loro, non lui
he'll let you go — ti, la, vi, li lascerà andare
4) (indirect object) (singular: informal) ti, a te; (singular: polite) le, a lei; (plural: informal) vi, a voi; (plural: polite) (a) loroI gave you the book — ti, le, vi ho dato il libro, ho dato loro il libro
I gave it to you — te lo, glielo, ve lo diedi, lo diedi loro
5) (after preposition) (singular: informal) te; (singular: polite) lei; (plural: informal) voi; (plural: polite) loroit's for you — è per te, lei, voi, loro
he came with you — è venuto con te, lei, voi, loro
he's taller than you — è più alto di te, lei, voi, loro
6) colloq.I don't like you interfering in my affairs — non mi piace che tu, lei si intrometta, che voi vi intromettiate, che loro si intromettano nei miei affari
7) (impersonal)••there's a manager for you — colloq. iron. ecco il direttore che fa per te o al caso tuo
* * *[ju:]1) ((used as the subject or object of a verb, or as the object of a preposition) the person(s) etc spoken or written to: You look well!; I asked you a question; Do you all understand?; Who came with you?) tu, te, ti; voi, ve, vi; lei, le2) (used with a noun when calling someone something, especially something unpleasant: You idiot!; You fools!) (specie di)* * *[ forma debole jʊ] [ forma forte juː]1) (subject, vocative) (singular: informal) tu; (singular: polite) lei; (plural: informal) voi; (plural: polite) loroyou've seen it — l'hai visto, l'ha visto, lo avete visto, l'hanno visto
here you are — eccoti, ecco a lei, eccovi, ecco a loro
I love ballet but you don't — io amo il balletto ma tu, lei, voi, loro no
you and I went to the concert — io e te, io e lei, io e voi andammo al concerto
you who... — tu, lei, voi, loro che...
you who see — tu che vedi, lei che vede, voi che vedete, loro che vedono
oh, it's you Ann — ah, sei tu, Ann
if I were you... — se fossi in te, al tuo posto
3) (direct object) (singular: informal) ti, te; (singular: polite) la, lei; (plural: informal) vi, voi; (plural: polite) li, loroI saw you on Monday — ti ho visto, l'ho vista, vi, li ho visti lunedì; (emphatic) ho visto te, lei, voi, loro lunedì
I know you, not him — conosco te, lei, voi, loro, non lui
he'll let you go — ti, la, vi, li lascerà andare
4) (indirect object) (singular: informal) ti, a te; (singular: polite) le, a lei; (plural: informal) vi, a voi; (plural: polite) (a) loroI gave you the book — ti, le, vi ho dato il libro, ho dato loro il libro
I gave it to you — te lo, glielo, ve lo diedi, lo diedi loro
5) (after preposition) (singular: informal) te; (singular: polite) lei; (plural: informal) voi; (plural: polite) loroit's for you — è per te, lei, voi, loro
he came with you — è venuto con te, lei, voi, loro
he's taller than you — è più alto di te, lei, voi, loro
6) colloq.I don't like you interfering in my affairs — non mi piace che tu, lei si intrometta, che voi vi intromettiate, che loro si intromettano nei miei affari
7) (impersonal)••there's a manager for you — colloq. iron. ecco il direttore che fa per te o al caso tuo
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6 its
[ɪts]determinante suo••Note:When translating its, remember that in Italian possessives, like most other adjectives, agree in gender and number with the noun they qualify, not as in English with the possessor they refer to; its is translated by suo + masculine singular noun ( its bone = il suo osso), sua + feminine singular noun ( its cage = la sua gabbia), suoi + masculine plural noun ( its whiskers = i suoi baffi), and sue + feminine plural noun ( its legs = le sue zampe). - The above examples also show that Italian possessives, unlike English ones, are normally preceded by an article* * *adjective (belonging to it: The bird has hurt its wing.) suo, sua, suoi, sue* * *[ɪts]determinante suo••Note:When translating its, remember that in Italian possessives, like most other adjectives, agree in gender and number with the noun they qualify, not as in English with the possessor they refer to; its is translated by suo + masculine singular noun ( its bone = il suo osso), sua + feminine singular noun ( its cage = la sua gabbia), suoi + masculine plural noun ( its whiskers = i suoi baffi), and sue + feminine plural noun ( its legs = le sue zampe). - The above examples also show that Italian possessives, unlike English ones, are normally preceded by an article -
7 our
['aʊə(r), ɑː(r)]determinante nostro••Note:When translating our, remember that in Italian possessives, like most other adjectives, agree in gender and number with the noun they qualify, not as in English with the possessor they refer to; our is translated by nostro + masculine singular noun ( our neighbour, our dog = il nostro vicino, il nostro cane), nostra + feminine singular noun ( our teacher, our house = la nostra maestra, la nostra casa), nostri + masculine plural noun ( our children, our books = i nostri figli, i nostri libri), and nostre + feminine plural noun (our friends, our shoes = le nostre amiche, le nostre scarpe). - The above examples also show that Italian possessives, unlike English ones, are normally preceded by an article. - When own is used after our to intensify the meaning of the possessive, it is not usually translated in Italian: we live in our own flat = abitiamo nel nostro appartamento. - When our is used before nouns indicating parts of the body (for which), garments, relatives, food and drink etc., Italian has an article instead: we had our hair cut = ci siamo fatti tagliare i capelli; we kept our hat on = abbiamo tenuto il cappello; we have eaten up our soup = abbiamo finito la minestra; we are both in our forties = abbiamo entrambi passato i quaranta* * *(belonging to us: This is our house.) nostro/a/i/e- ours- ourselves* * *['aʊə(r), ɑː(r)]determinante nostro••Note:When translating our, remember that in Italian possessives, like most other adjectives, agree in gender and number with the noun they qualify, not as in English with the possessor they refer to; our is translated by nostro + masculine singular noun ( our neighbour, our dog = il nostro vicino, il nostro cane), nostra + feminine singular noun ( our teacher, our house = la nostra maestra, la nostra casa), nostri + masculine plural noun ( our children, our books = i nostri figli, i nostri libri), and nostre + feminine plural noun (our friends, our shoes = le nostre amiche, le nostre scarpe). - The above examples also show that Italian possessives, unlike English ones, are normally preceded by an article. - When own is used after our to intensify the meaning of the possessive, it is not usually translated in Italian: we live in our own flat = abitiamo nel nostro appartamento. - When our is used before nouns indicating parts of the body (for which), garments, relatives, food and drink etc., Italian has an article instead: we had our hair cut = ci siamo fatti tagliare i capelli; we kept our hat on = abbiamo tenuto il cappello; we have eaten up our soup = abbiamo finito la minestra; we are both in our forties = abbiamo entrambi passato i quaranta -
8 their
[ðeə(r)]determinante loro••Note:Although in Italian possessives, like most other adjectives, agree in gender and number with the noun they qualify, not as in English with the possessor they refer to, their is always translated by loro; however, since Italian possessives, unlike English ones, are normally preceded by an article, the article - if not the possessive loro - will have to agree with the noun: loro + masculine singular noun ( their neighbour, their dog = il loro vicino, il loro cane), loro + feminine singular noun ( their teacher, their house = la loro maestra, la loro casa), loro + masculine plural noun ( their children, their books = i loro figli, i loro libri), and loro + feminine plural noun ( their friends, their shoes = le loro amiche, le loro scarpe). - When own is used after their to intensify the meaning of the possessive, it is not usually translated in Italian: they are getting to London in their own car = stanno andando a Londra con la loro macchina. - When their (or their own) is used to avoid saying his or her after words like everyone, no-one, anyone etc., it is usually translated by the adjective proprio in Italian: everyone is responsible for their own actions = ognuno è responsabile delle proprie azioni. - When their is used before nouns indicating parts of the body (for which), garments, relatives, food and drink etc., Italian has an article instead: they had their hair cut = si sono fatti tagliare i capelli; they kept their hat on = hanno tenuto il cappello; they came with their sister = sono venuti con la sorella, con la loro sorella; they have eaten up their soup = hanno finito la minestra; they are in their forties = hanno passato i quaranta* * *[ðeə]1) (belonging to them: This is their car; Take a note of their names and addresses.) loro2) (used instead of his, his or her etc where a person of unknown sex or people of both sexes are referred to: Everyone should buy his own ticket.) suo, sua, suoi, sue•- theirs* * *[ðeə(r)]determinante loro••Note:Although in Italian possessives, like most other adjectives, agree in gender and number with the noun they qualify, not as in English with the possessor they refer to, their is always translated by loro; however, since Italian possessives, unlike English ones, are normally preceded by an article, the article - if not the possessive loro - will have to agree with the noun: loro + masculine singular noun ( their neighbour, their dog = il loro vicino, il loro cane), loro + feminine singular noun ( their teacher, their house = la loro maestra, la loro casa), loro + masculine plural noun ( their children, their books = i loro figli, i loro libri), and loro + feminine plural noun ( their friends, their shoes = le loro amiche, le loro scarpe). - When own is used after their to intensify the meaning of the possessive, it is not usually translated in Italian: they are getting to London in their own car = stanno andando a Londra con la loro macchina. - When their (or their own) is used to avoid saying his or her after words like everyone, no-one, anyone etc., it is usually translated by the adjective proprio in Italian: everyone is responsible for their own actions = ognuno è responsabile delle proprie azioni. - When their is used before nouns indicating parts of the body (for which), garments, relatives, food and drink etc., Italian has an article instead: they had their hair cut = si sono fatti tagliare i capelli; they kept their hat on = hanno tenuto il cappello; they came with their sister = sono venuti con la sorella, con la loro sorella; they have eaten up their soup = hanno finito la minestra; they are in their forties = hanno passato i quaranta -
9 one's
I [wʌnz] II [wʌnz]determinante proprio••one's books, friends — i propri libri, amici
Note:When translating one's, remember that in Italian determiners, like possessives and most other adjectives, agree in gender and number with the noun they qualify; one's is translated by il proprio + masculine singular noun (one's neighbour, one's dog = il proprio vicino, il proprio cane), la propria + feminine singular noun (one's teacher, one's house = la propria maestra, la propria casa), i propri + masculine plural noun (one's children, one's books = i propri figli, i propri libri), and le proprie + feminine plural noun (one's friends, one's shoes = le proprie amiche, le proprie scarpe). - When one's is used as a reflexive pronoun after a verb in the infinitive, it is translated by si which is always joined to the verb to form a single word: to brush one's teeth = lavarsi i denti. - For examples and particular usages see the entry below* * *I [wʌnz] II [wʌnz]determinante proprio••one's books, friends — i propri libri, amici
Note:When translating one's, remember that in Italian determiners, like possessives and most other adjectives, agree in gender and number with the noun they qualify; one's is translated by il proprio + masculine singular noun (one's neighbour, one's dog = il proprio vicino, il proprio cane), la propria + feminine singular noun (one's teacher, one's house = la propria maestra, la propria casa), i propri + masculine plural noun (one's children, one's books = i propri figli, i propri libri), and le proprie + feminine plural noun (one's friends, one's shoes = le proprie amiche, le proprie scarpe). - When one's is used as a reflexive pronoun after a verb in the infinitive, it is translated by si which is always joined to the verb to form a single word: to brush one's teeth = lavarsi i denti. - For examples and particular usages see the entry below -
10 you ***** pers pron
[juː]you are! — eccoti!that dress just isn't you — quel vestito proprio non ti si addice
2) (see sense 1)), (object: direct) ti; la; vi; loro (after verb), (indirect) ti; le; vi; loro (after verb)I'll phone you later — ti chiamo più tardi/la chiamerò più tardi/vi chiamerò più tardi/li chiamerò più tardi
I gave it to you — te l'ho dato; gliel'ho dato; ve l'ho dato; l'ho dato loro
3) (see sense 1)), (stressed, after preposition, in comparisons) te; lei; voi; loroshe's younger than you — è più giovane di te (or lei etc)
4) (impersonal: one) si -
11 every
['evrɪ]1) (each)every time I go there — ogni volta o tutte le volte che vado lì
that goes for every one of you! — questo è valido per ognuno di voi o per tutti!
in every way — (from every point of view) sotto ogni aspetto; (using every method) in tutti i modi
2) (emphatic)every bit as much as — proprio tanto quanto, esattamente quanto
every day — ogni giorno, tutti i giorni
every other day — ogni due giorni, un giorno sì e uno no
every other Sunday — ogni due domeniche, una domenica sì e una no, una domenica su due
••••every now and then every now and again every so often every once in a while di tanto in tanto, di quando in quando, a volte; it's every man for himself ciascuno per sé; every man for himself! si salvi chi può! every which way — in ogni senso
Note:Every is usually used in front of a singular countable noun: every student = ogni studente. When every precedes a plural countable noun, it means that something happens at regular periods of time, after a certain distance, etc.: he smokes a cigarette every two hours = fuma una sigaretta ogni due ore; you'll have to fill up with petrol every 450 miles = dovrai fare il pieno di benzina ogni 450 miglia. - Every is most frequently translated by tutti / tutte + plural noun: every day = tutti i giorni. When every is emphasized to mean every single, it can also be translated by ogni o ciascuno. For examples and exceptions, see the entry below* * *['evri]1) (each one of or all (of a certain number): Every room is painted white; Not every family has a car.) ogni2) (each (of an indefinite number or series): Every hour brought the two countries nearer war; He attends to her every need.) ogni3) (the most absolute or complete possible: We have every reason to believe that she will get better.) ogni4) (used to show repetition after certain intervals of time or space: I go to the supermarket every four or five days; Every second house in the row was bright pink; `Every other day' means èvery two days' or `on alternate days'.) ogni•- everyone
- everyday
- everything
- everywhere
- every bit as
- every now and then / every now and again / every so often
- every time* * *['evrɪ]1) (each)every time I go there — ogni volta o tutte le volte che vado lì
that goes for every one of you! — questo è valido per ognuno di voi o per tutti!
in every way — (from every point of view) sotto ogni aspetto; (using every method) in tutti i modi
2) (emphatic)every bit as much as — proprio tanto quanto, esattamente quanto
every day — ogni giorno, tutti i giorni
every other day — ogni due giorni, un giorno sì e uno no
every other Sunday — ogni due domeniche, una domenica sì e una no, una domenica su due
••••every now and then every now and again every so often every once in a while di tanto in tanto, di quando in quando, a volte; it's every man for himself ciascuno per sé; every man for himself! si salvi chi può! every which way — in ogni senso
Note:Every is usually used in front of a singular countable noun: every student = ogni studente. When every precedes a plural countable noun, it means that something happens at regular periods of time, after a certain distance, etc.: he smokes a cigarette every two hours = fuma una sigaretta ogni due ore; you'll have to fill up with petrol every 450 miles = dovrai fare il pieno di benzina ogni 450 miglia. - Every is most frequently translated by tutti / tutte + plural noun: every day = tutti i giorni. When every is emphasized to mean every single, it can also be translated by ogni o ciascuno. For examples and exceptions, see the entry below -
12 everything
['evrɪθɪŋ]pronome ogni cosa, tutto••Note:Everything - which is followed by a verb in the singular - is almost always translated by tutto: everything is ready in its place = tutto è pronto al suo posto. For examples and particular usages, see below* * *pronoun (all things: Have you everything you want?) tutto* * *['evrɪθɪŋ]pronome ogni cosa, tutto••Note:Everything - which is followed by a verb in the singular - is almost always translated by tutto: everything is ready in its place = tutto è pronto al suo posto. For examples and particular usages, see below -
13 few
[fjuː] 1.(compar. fewer; superl. fewest) quantisostantivo femminile1) (not many) pochifew visitors, letters — pochi visitatori, poche lettere
on the few occasions that... — le rare volte che...
2) (some, several)every few days — a intervalli di pochi giorni, ogni due o tre giorni
over the next few days — (in past) nei giorni successivi; (in future) nei giorni a venire
3) a few qualche, alcunia few people, houses — alcune persone, case
quite a few people — un bel po' di o parecchie persone
2.a few weeks earlier — qualche settimana fa o prima
1) (not many) pochi m.pl. (-e)2) (some)3.a few of the soldiers, countries — alcuni dei soldati, dei paesi
the few who — i pochi o le poche persone che
••••to have had a few (too many) — colloq. avere bevuto qualche bicchiere di troppo
Note:When few is used as a quantifier to indicate the smallness or insufficiency of a given number or quantity ( few horses, few shops, few people), it is translated by pochi + masculine nouns and poche + feminine nouns: pochi cavalli, pochi negozi, poche persone. Equally the few is translated by i pochi / le poche: the few people who knew her = le poche persone che la conoscevano. For examples and particular usages, see I.1 in the entry below. - When few is used as a quantifier in certain expressions to mean several, translations vary according to the expression: see I.2 in the entry below. - When a few is used as a quantifier ( a few books), it can often be translated by qualche, which is invariable and is always followed by the singular: qualche libro; however, for expressions such as quite a few books, a good few books, see I.3 in the entry below. - For translations of few used as a pronoun ( few of us succeeded, I only need a few), see II in the entry below. - For translations of the few used as a noun ( the few who voted for him), see III in the entry below* * *[fju:]adjective, pronoun(not many; a very small number of: Few people visit me nowadays; every few minutes (= very frequently); Such opportunities are few.) poco- a few- few and far between* * *[fjuː] 1.(compar. fewer; superl. fewest) quantisostantivo femminile1) (not many) pochifew visitors, letters — pochi visitatori, poche lettere
on the few occasions that... — le rare volte che...
2) (some, several)every few days — a intervalli di pochi giorni, ogni due o tre giorni
over the next few days — (in past) nei giorni successivi; (in future) nei giorni a venire
3) a few qualche, alcunia few people, houses — alcune persone, case
quite a few people — un bel po' di o parecchie persone
2.a few weeks earlier — qualche settimana fa o prima
1) (not many) pochi m.pl. (-e)2) (some)3.a few of the soldiers, countries — alcuni dei soldati, dei paesi
the few who — i pochi o le poche persone che
••••to have had a few (too many) — colloq. avere bevuto qualche bicchiere di troppo
Note:When few is used as a quantifier to indicate the smallness or insufficiency of a given number or quantity ( few horses, few shops, few people), it is translated by pochi + masculine nouns and poche + feminine nouns: pochi cavalli, pochi negozi, poche persone. Equally the few is translated by i pochi / le poche: the few people who knew her = le poche persone che la conoscevano. For examples and particular usages, see I.1 in the entry below. - When few is used as a quantifier in certain expressions to mean several, translations vary according to the expression: see I.2 in the entry below. - When a few is used as a quantifier ( a few books), it can often be translated by qualche, which is invariable and is always followed by the singular: qualche libro; however, for expressions such as quite a few books, a good few books, see I.3 in the entry below. - For translations of few used as a pronoun ( few of us succeeded, I only need a few), see II in the entry below. - For translations of the few used as a noun ( the few who voted for him), see III in the entry below -
14 person
['pɜːsn]1) (human being) (pl. people, persons form.) persona f., individuo m.to do sth. in person — fare qcs. di persona
2) (type)I didn't know he was a horsey person! — colloq. non sapevo che andasse matto per i cavalli!
I'm not a wine person myself — non amo molto il vino, io
3) (body)to have sth. about one's person — avere qcs. su di sé o addosso
offences against the person — dir. delitti contro la persona
her person was pleasing — ant. aveva un bel personale
4) ling. persona f.* * *['pə:sn]plural - people; noun1) (a human being: There's a person outside who wants to speak to you.) persona2) (a person's body: He never carried money on his person (= with him; in his pockets etc).) sé, persona•- personal- personality
- personally
- personal computer
- personal pronoun
- personal stereo
- personal watercraft
- in person* * *['pɜːsn]1) (human being) (pl. people, persons form.) persona f., individuo m.to do sth. in person — fare qcs. di persona
2) (type)I didn't know he was a horsey person! — colloq. non sapevo che andasse matto per i cavalli!
I'm not a wine person myself — non amo molto il vino, io
3) (body)to have sth. about one's person — avere qcs. su di sé o addosso
offences against the person — dir. delitti contro la persona
her person was pleasing — ant. aveva un bel personale
4) ling. persona f. -
15 separate
I 1. ['sepərət]1) (with singular noun) [piece, organization] separato, a sé stante; [discussion, issue, occasion] altro, diversothe flat is separate from the rest of the house — l'appartamento è indipendente dal resto della casa
2) (with plural noun) [pieces, sections] separato, differente; [problems, agreements] diverso, distinto, separato2. II 1. ['sepəreɪt]to ask for separate bills — (in restaurant) chiedere conti separati
1) (divide) [wall, river] dividere, separare [ country]; [intolerance, belief] dividere [ people]; separare [milk, egg]to separate the issue of pay from that of working hours — distinguere o tenere separata la questione dello stipendio da quella dell'orario di lavoro
2) (anche separate out) (sort out) suddividere [pupils, children]; smistare, selezionare [ objects]2.verbo intransitivo [person, couple] separarsi* * *1. ['sepəreit] verb1) ((sometimes with into or from) to place, take, keep or force apart: He separated the money into two piles; A policeman tried to separate the men who were fighting.) separare2) (to go in different directions: We all walked along together and separated at the cross-roads.) separarsi3) ((of a husband and wife) to start living apart from each other by choice.) separarsi2. [-rət] adjective1) (divided; not joined: He sawed the wood into four separate pieces; The garage is separate from the house.) separato2) (different or distinct: This happened on two separate occasions; I like to keep my job and my home life separate.) diverso; separato•- separable
- separately
- separates
- separation
- separatist
- separatism
- separate off
- separate out
- separate up* * *I 1. ['sepərət]1) (with singular noun) [piece, organization] separato, a sé stante; [discussion, issue, occasion] altro, diversothe flat is separate from the rest of the house — l'appartamento è indipendente dal resto della casa
2) (with plural noun) [pieces, sections] separato, differente; [problems, agreements] diverso, distinto, separato2. II 1. ['sepəreɪt]to ask for separate bills — (in restaurant) chiedere conti separati
1) (divide) [wall, river] dividere, separare [ country]; [intolerance, belief] dividere [ people]; separare [milk, egg]to separate the issue of pay from that of working hours — distinguere o tenere separata la questione dello stipendio da quella dell'orario di lavoro
2) (anche separate out) (sort out) suddividere [pupils, children]; smistare, selezionare [ objects]2.verbo intransitivo [person, couple] separarsi -
16 they
[ðeɪ]they have already gone — (masculine or mixed) sono già partiti; (feminine) sono già partite
here they are! — (masculine or mixed) eccoli! (feminine) eccole!
••there they are! — (masculine or mixed) eccoli là! (feminine) eccole là!
Note:They is usually translated by loro (which is in itself the object, not the subject pronoun); the subject pronouns essi (masculine) and esse (feminine) are rarely used in colloquial language: they can certainly do it = loro sanno farlo di sicuro. - Remember that in Italian the subject pronoun is very often understood: they came by train = sono venuti in treno. When used in emphasis, however, the pronoun is stressed, and is placed either at the beginning or at the end of the sentence: they killed her! = loro l'hanno uccisa! l'hanno uccisa loro! - When they is used impersonally, it is translated by si (+ verb in the third person singular): they drink a lot of beer in Britain, don't they? = si beve molta birra in Gran Bretagna, vero? they say he has left = si dice che sia partito. - When they is used to avoid saying he or she after words like everyone, no-one, anyone etc., it is usually understood in Italian: everyone should do what they like = ognuno dovrebbe fare quello che vuole / tutti dovrebbero fare quello che vogliono. - For more examples and exceptions, see below* * *[ðei]1) (persons, animals or things already spoken about, being pointed out etc: They are in the garden.) essi, esse, loro2) (used instead of he, he or she etc when the person's sex is unknown or when people of both sexes are being referred to: If anyone does that, they are to be severely punished.) (lui), (lei)* * *[ðeɪ]they have already gone — (masculine or mixed) sono già partiti; (feminine) sono già partite
here they are! — (masculine or mixed) eccoli! (feminine) eccole!
••there they are! — (masculine or mixed) eccoli là! (feminine) eccole là!
Note:They is usually translated by loro (which is in itself the object, not the subject pronoun); the subject pronouns essi (masculine) and esse (feminine) are rarely used in colloquial language: they can certainly do it = loro sanno farlo di sicuro. - Remember that in Italian the subject pronoun is very often understood: they came by train = sono venuti in treno. When used in emphasis, however, the pronoun is stressed, and is placed either at the beginning or at the end of the sentence: they killed her! = loro l'hanno uccisa! l'hanno uccisa loro! - When they is used impersonally, it is translated by si (+ verb in the third person singular): they drink a lot of beer in Britain, don't they? = si beve molta birra in Gran Bretagna, vero? they say he has left = si dice che sia partito. - When they is used to avoid saying he or she after words like everyone, no-one, anyone etc., it is usually understood in Italian: everyone should do what they like = ognuno dovrebbe fare quello che vuole / tutti dovrebbero fare quello che vogliono. - For more examples and exceptions, see below -
17 we
[ forma debole wɪ] [ forma forte wiː]pronome noi••we didn't say that — noi non lo abbiamo detto, non lo abbiamo detto noi
Note:We is translated by noi which, however, is very often understood: we're leaving for London tomorrow = domani partiamo per Londra. - When we is used in emphasis, noi is employed and stressed, and placed either at the beginning or at the end of the sentence: we didn't take it = noi non l'abbiamo preso, non l'abbiamo preso noi. - When we is used impersonally, it is translated by si (+ verb in the third person singular): we drink a lot of beer in Britain = in Gran Bretagna si beve molta birra. - For particular usages see the entry below* * *[wi:]((used only as the subject of a verb) the word used by a speaker or writer in mentioning himself or herself together with other people: We are going home tomorrow.) noi* * *[ forma debole wɪ] [ forma forte wiː]pronome noi••we didn't say that — noi non lo abbiamo detto, non lo abbiamo detto noi
Note:We is translated by noi which, however, is very often understood: we're leaving for London tomorrow = domani partiamo per Londra. - When we is used in emphasis, noi is employed and stressed, and placed either at the beginning or at the end of the sentence: we didn't take it = noi non l'abbiamo preso, non l'abbiamo preso noi. - When we is used impersonally, it is translated by si (+ verb in the third person singular): we drink a lot of beer in Britain = in Gran Bretagna si beve molta birra. - For particular usages see the entry below -
18 acoustics
[ə'kuːstɪks]1) (science) + verbo sing. acustica f.2) (properties) + verbo pl. acustica f.* * *1) ( noun plural the characteristics (eg of a room or hall) which make hearing in it good or bad.) acustica2) ( noun singular the science of sound.)* * *acoustics /əˈku:stɪks/n. pl.1 (col verbo al sing.) (fis.) acustica* * *[ə'kuːstɪks]1) (science) + verbo sing. acustica f.2) (properties) + verbo pl. acustica f. -
19 aeronautics
[ˌeərə'nɔːtɪks]nome + verbo sing. aeronautica f.* * *[eərə'no:tiks](the science or practice of flying: Aeronautics is a popular science.) aeronautica* * *aeronautics /ɛərəˈnɔ:tɪks/n. pl.(col verbo al sing.) aeronauticaaeronautic, aeronauticala.aeronautico.* * *[ˌeərə'nɔːtɪks]nome + verbo sing. aeronautica f. -
20 athletics
[æθ'letɪks] 1.nome + verbo sing. BE atletica f.; AE sport m.2.modificatore [ club] BE di atletica; AE sportivo* * *[-'le-]noun singular (the sports of running, jumping etc or competitions in these: Athletics was my favourite activity at school.) atletica* * *athletics /æɵˈlɛtɪks/n. pl.(anche col verbo al sing.) atletica.* * *[æθ'letɪks] 1.nome + verbo sing. BE atletica f.; AE sport m.2.modificatore [ club] BE di atletica; AE sportivo
См. также в других словарях:
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