INTRODUCTION |
Cinzia: Buongiorno! Mi chiamo Cinzia. |
Marco: Marco here! Beginner series Season 1, Lesson 11 - Multiple Possessions - Stop the Plane! I Left My Glasses in Italy! |
Marco: Buongiorno tutti! Hi! My name is Marco, and I’m joined here by our lovely Cinzia. Come stai, Cinzia? |
Cinzia: Sto molto bene, Marco, grazie. Hello, everyone! And welcome to the eleventh lesson of the Beginner series. |
Marco: Here, we take a broad approach to language, emphasizing listening comprehension, |
Cinzia: speech, grammar, |
Marco: vocabulary and usage. |
Cinzia: So join us for this lesson on ItalianPod101.com. |
Marco: In this lesson, we shall see the plural forms of both masculine and feminine possessive adjectives. |
Cinzia: This conversation takes place in an Italian house. |
Marco: And it is between Antonio and Maria. |
Cinzia: The speakers are friends, therefore they will be speaking informal Italian. Be sure to check out the learning center for lesson-specific tools and general reference material. |
Marco: I will be Antonio, while Cinzia will be… |
Cinzia: Maria. |
DIALOGUE |
Antonio: Hai visto le mie chiavi della macchina? |
Maria: Umm...No! |
Antonio: E i miei occhiali? |
Maria: Umm...No! |
Antonio: E le mie sigarette, dove sono? |
Maria: Ehh...le tue sigarette sono finite! |
Antonio: Ma non hai smesso di fumare?! |
Maria: Umm...No! |
Marco: Let's hear it slowly now. |
Cinzia: Ascoltiamolo lentamente. |
Antonio: Hai visto le mie chiavi della macchina? |
Maria: Umm...No! |
Antonio: E i miei occhiali? |
Maria: Umm...No! |
Antonio: E le mie sigarette, dove sono? |
Maria: Ehh...le tue sigarette sono finite! |
Antonio: Ma non hai smesso di fumare?! |
Maria: Umm...No! |
Marco: And now, with the translation. |
Cinzia: E ora, con la traduzione. |
Antonio: Hai visto le mie chiavi della macchina? |
Antonio: Have you seen my car keys? |
Maria: Umm...No! |
Maria: Um...nope! |
Antonio: E i miei occhiali? |
Antonio: And my glasses? |
Maria: Umm...No! |
Maria: Um...nope! |
Antonio: E le mie sigarette, dove sono? |
Antonio: And my cigarettes, where are they? |
Maria: Ehh...le tue sigarette sono finite! |
Maria: Eh...you're out of cigarettes. (literally, “your cigarettes are finished.”) |
Antonio: Ma non hai smesso di fumare?! |
Antonio: But haven’t you quit smoking?! |
Maria: Umm...No! |
Maria: Um...nope! |
POST CONVERSATION BANTER |
Marco: Cinzia, Cinzia, you’re just like Maria, always taking away somebody’s things. |
Cinzia: Really? |
Marco: Yes. In the office, you always take other people’s pens, pencils, paper. |
Cinzia: Oh, come on, Marco, it’s just because I never find mine. |
Marco: Yeah, some folletto is taking away your things, right? |
Cinzia: Yes, of course! It’s not my fault. |
Marco: Yeah, it’s never her fault. Anyway, on with the vocabulary. Let us take a look at today’s vocabulary. |
VOCAB LIST |
Marco: First |
Cinzia: chiavi [natural native speed] |
Marco: keys |
Cinzia: chiavi [slowly - broken down by syllable] chiavi [natural native speed] |
Marco: Next |
Cinzia: occhiali [natural native speed] |
Marco: glasses |
Cinzia: occhiali [slowly - broken down by syllable] occhiali [natural native speed] |
Marco: Next |
Cinzia: sigarette [natural native speed] |
Marco: cigarettes |
Cinzia: sigarette [slowly - broken down by syllable] sigarette [natural native speed] |
Marco: Next |
Cinzia: dove [natural native speed] |
Marco: where |
Cinzia: dove [slowly - broken down by syllable] dove [natural native speed] |
Marco: Next |
Cinzia: smettere [natural native speed] |
Marco: to quit, to stop |
Cinzia: smettere [slowly - broken down by syllable] smettere [natural native speed] |
Marco: Next |
Cinzia: fumare [natural native speed] |
Marco: to smoke |
Cinzia: fumare [slowly - broken down by syllable] fumare [natural native speed] |
Marco: And last word… |
Cinzia: macchina [natural native speed] |
Marco: car, automobile |
Cinzia: macchina [slowly - broken down by syllable] macchina [natural native speed] |
VOCAB AND PHRASE USAGE |
Marco: Perfect! |
Cinzia: So now, let’s have a look at the usage for some of the words and expressions. The first word we will look at is chiavi. |
Marco: Cinzia, can you give us an example sentence, please? |
Cinzia: Le chiavi del motorino. |
Marco: “The scooter keys.” Cinzia, do you have a scooter? |
Cinzia: Yes, of course. |
Marco: Really? |
Cinzia: Yes. I love my scooter. |
Marco: Oh, what brand is it? |
Cinzia: Aprilia |
Marco: Aprilia? Scarabeo, maybe? |
Cinzia: No, of course not. It’s the classical and typical scooter the girls have. |
Marco: What is it? |
Cinzia: It’s Area 51. |
Marco: Oh, I like that one. It’s a very aggressive line. |
Cinzia: Yes. |
Marco: Okay. |
Cinzia: I’m so cool on my scooter. |
Marco: Do you wear a helmet every time? |
Cinzia: Um… |
Cinzia: You have to and tell everybody out there that they should too. |
Cinzia: Yes, true. I sometimes don’t wear the helmet, but of course I’m wrong, so wear the helmet and drive safely. Okay, the next word is occhiali. |
Marco: Let’s have an example. |
Cinzia: Marco non porta gli occhiali. |
Marco: “Marco doesn’t wear glasses.” |
Cinzia: Next word is sigarette. |
Marco: One example, please. |
Cinzia: Ho finito le sigarette. |
Marco: “I finished the cigarettes.” |
Cinzia: And the next word we will see is dove. |
Marco: And the example is… |
Cinzia: Dove vai? |
Marco: “Where are you going?” |
Cinzia: The next word we will see is smettere. |
Marco: And the example is… |
Cinzia: Smetti di ridere! |
Marco: "Stop laughing!" And that’s for you, Cinzia, you’re always laughing. |
Cinzia: Yes, but it’s not my fault, but just to have fun when we make these lessons. |
Marco: That’s good. |
Cinzia: The last word for today is fumare. |
Marco: One last example then. |
Cinzia: Non fumare. |
Marco: “Don’t smoke.” |
Cinzia: This wraps it up for the vocabulary usage. |
Lesson focus
|
Cinzia: Today, we shall see the plural forms of both masculine and femine possessive adjectives. As you should know, possessive adjectives change not only according to the gender (masculine/feminine), but also to the number (singular/plural) of the nouns they precede. |
Cinzia: The only exception is the possessive "their" (loro), that never changes. |
Marco: The following explanation should help you clarify this point. |
Cinzia: So now, let’s take a look at the masculine plural possessive adjectives. |
Marco: Perfect. Take it from there, Cinzia. |
Cinzia: miei |
Marco: “my” |
Cinzia: tuoi |
Marco: “your” |
Cinzia: suoi |
Marco: “his/her” |
Cinzia: nostri |
Marco: “our” |
Cinzia: vostri |
Marco: “your” |
Cinzia: loro |
Marco: “Their.” And now, let’s take a look at the feminine plural possessive adjectives. Cinzia? |
Cinzia: mie |
Marco: “my” |
Cinzia: tue |
Marco: “your” |
Cinzia: sue |
Marco: “his/her” |
Cinzia: nostre |
Marco: “our” |
Cinzia: vostre |
Marco: “your” |
Cinzia: loro |
Marco: “their” |
Cinzia: So, it’s not really complicated, Marco, is it? |
Marco: No! No, very easy, very easy. |
Cinzia: As we have already seen, the third plural person doesn’t change. |
Marco: Yes, at all. It’s always loro and loro. |
Cinzia: So, as you can see in the dialogue, possessive adjectives require a definite article preceding them. Both the article and the adjective must agree in person and number with the noun. Here are some examples. |
Marco: "my books" |
Cinzia: i miei libri |
Marco: "your keys" |
Cinzia: le tue chiavi |
Marco: "His cigarettes" |
Cinzia: le sue sigarette |
Marco: "her glasses" |
Cinzia: i suoi occhiali |
Outro
|
Cinzia: So… that’s it for today’s lesson. |
Marco: Don’t forget to check out the lesson transcripts in the PDF at ItalianPod1010.com. |
Cinzia: Grazie e ciao ciao! Ci vediamo presto! |
Marco: Ciao a tutti! |
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