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Ronnie Callegari
endings of "inglese" when used as an adjective
Just studying my Italian Grammar Book regarding the use of nationalities as adjectives, particularly " inglese "
It states :
Italian adjectives ending in -e can describe/qualify both masculine and feminine nouns.However the plural
endings of these adjectives follow the same rules as nouns ending in -e
This is a little confusing for me
OK so using "inglese" as an adjective
would you say based on the above rules of grammar as stated:
The English man = .L'uomo inglese
The English woman = La donna inglese
and in plural form
The English girls = le ragazze inglesi
The English boys = I ragazzi inglesi
The English cars = le machine inglesi
Also if for instance you meet an Italian woman for the first time
is it correct you say.....italiana lei ?
and would it be ....inglese lei ......... for an English woman
Thanks in advance for your help
Dec 31, 2013 9:28 PM
Answers · 3
Hi Ronnie,
the way you are using the adjective "inglese" is correct.
In italian we have 3 types of adjectives:
adjectives with 4 endings
these ones changes in number and gender:
il ragazzo è simpatico
la ragazza è simpatica
i ragazzi sono simpatici
le ragazze sono simpatiche
adjectives with 2 endings
these ones changes only in number, and ends only with "e" (for singular) and "i" (for plural)
il ragazzo è intelligente
la ragazza è intelligente
i ragazzi sono intelligenti
le ragazze sono intelligenti
adjectives with 1 ending
there are few adjectives that have just one ending, most of them are colours
le scarpe sono viola (blu, rosa)
http://italian-grammar.italianforyou.com/morfologia/aggettivi/morfologia-aggettivi.php
"inglese" works as an adjective with 2 endings
instead "italiano" works as an adjective with 4 endings
About asking nationality, you inflected in the right way those adjectives, but you have to use the verb "essere", so you can say:
lei è italiana? / lei è inglese?
or
è italiana lei? / è inglese lei?
the difference is about what you are highlight, in the first one is the nationality, in the second one the person.
I hope this can help
January 2, 2014
yeah, you're right.
adjectives and nouns ending in -e turn into -i in the plural (both masculine and feminine).
ex.:
l'uomo francese (the French man=masc.sing.), la donna francese (the French woman =fem.sing.)
gli uomini francesi (the French men= masc. plur.), le donne francesi (the French women)
It's the same for other kinds of adj. and nouns:
adj. FELICE (masc. and fem. sing)/ FELICI (masc. and fem. plur.)= HAPPY
noun IL PIEDE (masc. sing)/ I PIEDI (masc. plur.)= THE FOOT/FEET
noun LA VOLPE (fem. sing,)/ LE VOLPI (fem. plur.) = THE FOX/FOXES
Don't forget to put the verb in the question:
Lei è inglese?
I hope this short explanation can help you! ;-)
January 1, 2014
The usage of inglese, inglesi in your examples is correct (except "macchina").
As for asking, you can ask "Lei è italiana?" (are you italian?) and she will ask "Lei è inglese?"
December 31, 2013
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Ronnie Callegari
Language Skills
English, Italian
Learning Language
Italian
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