PRESENT TENSE TEMPO PRESENTE
In English this tense looks like "he runs", "they live",
"she is working", "we are talking"
These four examples all have pronouns he, they, she, we, but in Italian
the pronouns are not necessary because the verb always has an ending to indicate
what personal pronoun we want. the four English examples above would each be
one single word in Italian.
Italian does have personal pronouns; you won't see them very often, but here
they are:
io |
I |
noi |
we |
tu |
you |
voi |
you |
lui |
he |
loro |
they |
lei |
she |
|
|
Lei |
you |
|
|
|
2 SCRIVERE |
|
1st pers. sing. I |
|
scrivo |
2nd pers. sing. you |
scrivi |
3rd pers. sing. he, she, it |
scrive |
1st pers. plur. we |
scriviamo |
2nd pers. plur. you |
scrivete |
3rd pers. plur. they |
scrivono |
PIACERE POWERPOINT