1994 Ap English Language And Composition Free Response Essay Samples
Tuesday, March 3, 2020
Learn About the Verb Essere (To Be) in Italian
Learn About the Verb Essere (To Be) in Italian          Essere is an irregular verb (un verbo irregolare); it does not follow a predictable pattern of conjugation. Note that the form sono is used with bothà  io and loro.          Grammatical Notes      Essere is used with di  name of a city to indicate city of origin (the city someone is from). To indicate country of origin, an adjective of nationality is generally used: He is from France  He is French  ÃË francese.         Io sono di Chicago: tu di dove sei? (Im from Chicago; where are you from?)         Essere  di  proper name is used to indicate possession. No apostrophe s is used in Italian to indicate possession: It is Annas  It is of Anna  ÃË di Anna.         Questa chitarra à ¨ di Beppino; non à ¨ di Vittoria.à  (This guitar is Beppinos; its not Vittorias.)         To find out who the owner of something is, ask Di chi à ¨  singular or Di chi sono  plural.         Di chi à ¨ questo cane? Di chi sono questi cani? (Whose dog is this? Whose dogs are these?)          Essere as an Auxiliary Verb      Essere is also used as an auxiliary verb in the following cases:         Reflexive verbs: those verbs whose action reverts to the subject, as in the following examples: I wash myself. They enjoy themselves.Impersonal form: as in the English equivalents one, you, we, they, or people  verb. Si mangia bene in Italia - People (They) eat well in Italy.Passive voice: in a passive construction the subject of the verb receives the action instead of doing it, as in the sentence: Caesar was killed by Brutus.         The present tense (il presente) of essere is as follows:          Conjugating the Italian Verb Essere in the Present Tense                  SINGOLARE  PLURALE          (io) sono I am  (noi) siamo we are      (tu) sei you are (fam.)  (voi) siete you are (fam.)      (Lei)  you are (form.)  (Loro) sono you are (form.)      (lui)  he is  (loro) sono they are (fam.)                To Be, or Not To Be?: Compound Tenses      The compound tenses are verb tenses, such as theà  passato prossimo, that consist of two words. The appropriate tense ofà  avereà  orà  essereà  (called theà  auxiliary or helping verbs) and the past participle of the target verb forms the verb phrase.         When usingà  essere, the past participle always agrees in gender and number with the subject of the verb. It can therefore have four endings:à  -o, -a, -i, -e. In many cases intransitive verbs (those that cannot take a direct object), especially those expressing motion, are conjugated with the auxiliary verbà  essere. The verbà  essereà  is also conjugated with itself as the auxiliary verb.         Some of the most common verbs that form compound tenses withà  essereà  include:         andare (to go)arrivare (to arrive)cadere (to fall, to drop)costare (to cost)crescere (to grow)diventare (to become)per durare, continuare (to last, to continue)per entrare (to enter)morire (to die)nascere (to be born)lasciare, partire (to leave, to depart)stare, rimanere (to stay, to remain)ritornare (to return)uscire (to exit)venire (to come)    
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