Vocabulary (Review)
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Learn how adjective endings work
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Hi, everyone! I'm Felice Angelini. |
Ciao a tutti, sono Felice Angelini. |
Welcome to another Italian Whiteboard Lesson! |
In this lesson, we'll learn how to conjugate adjectives according to gender. |
Okay, let's look at the vocabulary. First, we have... |
Alto |
And, |
alta |
Alto or alta means “tall” |
Next. |
Bello |
And, |
bella |
Bello or bella means “beautiful” |
Next. |
Giovane. |
Giovane means “young’ |
The last one, |
Elegante |
Elegante means “elegant.” |
Let's look at the dialogue. While I read it, I want you to pay attention to the adjective. Find what the adjective is and see how it's used in the dialogue. |
Are you ready? |
A: Quello è mio fratello! |
“That's my brother!” |
B: È alto! |
“He's tall!” |
Let's see some examples of how gender influences adjectives. Imagine now that the tall person is a girl instead of a boy. |
È alta. |
"She's tall." |
Now imagine that the person is also young. You can say |
È giovane. |
"He is young" or “She is young." |
Did you notice how the words changed? |
È alto. |
È alta. |
È giovane. |
For a boy, alto. |
For a girl, alta. |
For a boy or a girl, giovane. |
Unless you're very close to the person you're talking to, avoid commenting on people's appearance, regardless of whether you're commenting on their appearance or someone else's. |
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