Search from various English teachers...
Tia Ou
What's the difference between "adesso" and "ora"
They both mean "now", but when should I use "adesso" and when "ora"?
Aug 30, 2016 7:36 AM
Answers · 2
3
adesso: now
ora: 1. hour, 2. now
Examples:
a) Quando partiamo?
b) Ora ( = adesso)
a1) Quando partiamo?
b1) Fra un'ora (Eng.: in an hour)
a2) Per favore puoi telefonare a Giovanni?
b2o) L'ho chiamato proprio ora, mi ero scordato di dirtelo.
b2a) L'ho chiamato proprio adesso, mi ero scordato di dirtelo.
(b2o) is better than (b2a) as it relates to an action that is in the past, even if in a very recent past.
a3) Puoi portare fuori il cane per favore?
b3) Quando?
a3a) Adesso sarebbe meglio.
a3o) Ora sarebbe meglio.
You can use both (a3a) or (a3o) with exactly the same meaning (action in the immediate future)
August 30, 2016
1
"Adesso" and "ora" are synonyms and you can you them interchangeably. However, note that "ora" has two meanings: if considered as an adverb it means "now", but if considered as a noun it means "hour" (singular: l'ora; plural: le ore).
In some regions of central Italy you can also hear the word "mo", that also means "now", but it is only used in informal and dialectal speech, and is never used in standard Italian (even if the famous poet Dante uses it in its Divina Commedia). It probabily comes as an abbreviation of the Latin word "modo", that also means "now".
August 31, 2016
Still haven’t found your answers?
Write down your questions and let the native speakers help you!
Tia Ou
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), English, Italian
Learning Language
English, Italian
Articles You May Also Like

🎃 October Traditions: Halloween, Holidays, and Learning Portuguese
17 likes · 3 Comments

The Curious World of Silent Letters in English
16 likes · 6 Comments

5 Polite Ways to Say “No” at Work
21 likes · 4 Comments
More articles