Saturday, November 23, 2019
Irregular Past Participles in Italian
Irregular Past Participles in Italian          Youââ¬â¢ve learned that if you want to talk about the past in Italian, youââ¬â¢re going to have to learn the past participles of each verb. Lucky for you, a lot of verbs in Italian are considered regular and therefore have formulaic endings, like how regular -are verbs end in -ato. For example, parlare ââ â parlato; andare ââ â andato; camminare ââ â camminato; guardare ââ â guardato.         While you do get off easy when it comes to those regular verbs, many verbs in Italian, especially the ones ending in -ere, have irregular past participles.         Below youââ¬â¢ll find a list of some of the most common infinitives as well as their past participle forms. Plus, youââ¬â¢ll also see a sample variation, like ââ¬Å"riaccendereâ⬠ being a variant of ââ¬Å"accendereâ⬠.          Irregular Past Participles                      INFINITIVE  PAST PARTICIPLE  VARIATION ON THE INFINITIVE  PAST PARTICIPLE      accendere  acceso  riaccendere  riacceso      chiedere  chiesto  richiedere  richiesto      chiudere  chiuso  racchiudere  racchiuso      cogliere  colto  raccogliere  raccolto      cuocere  cotto  stracuocere  stracotto      dire  detto  predire  predetto      dividere  diviso  condividere  condiviso      fare  fatto  strafare  strafatto      leggere  letto  rileggere  riletto      porre  posto  frapporre  frapposto      reggere  retto  correggere  corretto      rispondere  risposto  corrispondere  corrisposto      rompere  rotto  corrompere  corrotto      scegliere  scelto  prescegliere  prescelto      scrivere  scritto  riscrivere  riscritto      trarre  tratto  ritrarre  ritratto      vincere  vinto  convincere  convinto      volgere  volto  rivolgere  rivolto               Gli esempi:         Ci hanno chiesto aiuto. - They asked us for help.Non ha chiuso la porta. - She didnââ¬â¢t close the door.Che hai detto? - What did you say?Avete letto quel libro? - Have you all read that book?Ti ho scritto una lettera ieri sera. - I wrote you a letter last night.Non mi ha ancora risposto. - He hasnââ¬â¢t answered me yet.Scusa, abbiamo rotto i bicchieri. - Sorry, we broke the glasses.Hanno vinto il gioco! - They won the game!          Other common irregular past participles:      Bere (to drink) ââ â Bevuto (drank)Dare (to give) ââ â Dato (gave)Mettere (to put) ââ â Messo (put)Morire (to die) ââ â Morto (died)Nascere (to be born) ââ â Nato (born)Perdere (to lose) ââ â Perso (lost)Ridere (to laugh) ââ â Riso (laughed)Rimanere (to remain) ââ â Rimasto (remained)Scendere (to descend, to go down) ââ â à  Sceso (descended)Vivere (to live) ââ â Vissuto (lived)          Is there still a pattern?      Even though these past participles are considered irregular, many of them have repeating patterns. For example, the past participle of any verb that ends in -mettere will also end in -messo.         For example:         Ammettere (to admit, to allow in, to let in) becomes ammessoCommettere (to commit, to commission) becomes commessoDimettere (to dismiss, to remove) becomes dimessoOmettere (to omit, to leave out) becomes omessoPromettere (to promise) becomes promessoRimettere (to remit, to refer) becomes rimesso         It will take some practice, but once you recognize the patterns and commit others to memory, it will be a lot easier to talk about the past with confidence. If you need to review how to form the past tense (il passato prossimo), take a look at this article here and then review this article on auxiliary verbs as well.    
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