Ciao, mi presento... (8 Viewers)

gray

Senior Member
Moderator
Apr 22, 2003
30,260
So there's a group of old ladies who often walk past my house speaking Italian.

How would I say to them "I always hear you speaking Italian and I'm trying to learn it"? :)
 

Martin

Senior Member
Dec 31, 2000
56,913
People that age are very big on greetings, so you would start with a greeting.

Buona sera! Vi vedo sempre parlare italiano. Sto cercando di imparare.
literal: "You (plural) see always speak Italian. Am searching to learn."
 

gray

Senior Member
Moderator
Apr 22, 2003
30,260
Thanks M, super helpful as always.

Why is it "sto cercando" instead of "sono cercando"? Does 'sto' denote present continuous? And is "vi vedo" rather than 'I hear you' just how an Italian would express it?
 

Martin

Senior Member
Dec 31, 2000
56,913
Thanks M, super helpful as always.

Why is it "sto cercando" instead of "sono cercando"? Does 'sto' denote present continuous?
Because the present continuous is formed with stare, not essere. In English they both mean "to be".

And is "vi vedo" rather than 'I hear you' just how an Italian would express it?
Yeah, there are many subtle differences in formulation between English and Italian. That's one of the challenges of the language. I find "vi vedo" more natural in this context, but you could also say "vi sento".
 

gray

Senior Member
Moderator
Apr 22, 2003
30,260
@Martin I'm doing a listening quiz and got "e il suo cane", which I translated as "it is his dog", but it said I was wrong because the correct answer is it is her dog". How am I supposed to know the difference? There was no other context given.
 

Ocelot

Midnight Marauder
Jul 13, 2013
18,943
@Martin I'm doing a listening quiz and got "e il suo cane", which I translated as "it is his dog", but it said I was wrong because the correct answer is it is her dog". How am I supposed to know the difference? There was no other context given.
As far as I know there isn't any way to know the gender of the owner with such an isolated statement.
 

Martin

Senior Member
Dec 31, 2000
56,913
@Martin I'm doing a listening quiz and got "e il suo cane", which I translated as "it is his dog", but it said I was wrong because the correct answer is "it is her dog". How am I supposed to know the difference? There was no other context given.
There is no distinction between the two. This is just the quiz being wrong. :)
 

JuveJay

Senior Signor
Moderator
Mar 6, 2007
72,231
@Ocelot @Martin ahh ok, thanks. At least I know I'm on the right track :)


Yep. Decent tool to keep you motivated and reviewing, but definitely insufficient for standalone learning.
I'm using it on and off at the moment for Spanish, plus I've been doing the Italian one parallel to that even though I'm not really learning anything, just so I can see the flaws of the software and how to work around it for Spanish.
 

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