INTRODUCTION |
Marco: Buon giorno! Mi chiamo Marco. Newbie Series season 1, lesson #18 - Versace and Valentino and Armani, Oh My! |
Cinzia: Buon giorno a tutti! Hi, my name is Cinzia and I am joined here by Marco. Ciao, Marco. Come va? |
Marco: Va tutto bene. Hello and welcome to the Newbie Series of Italianpod101.com. |
Cinzia: Thanks for joining us for our 18th lesson of this Newbie Series. |
Marco: Which focuses on the basics for anyone starting to learn the Italian language. |
Cinzia: So please join us for this lesson of Italianpod101.com. |
Marco: The focus of this lesson is the presente indicativo tense of the second conjugation verbs. |
Cinzia: This conversation takes place in a cafe. |
Marco: And it is between Laura and John. |
Cinzia: They are friends, therefore they will be speaking informal Italian. Reinforce your Italian by using the Grammar Bank of the Learning Center at Italianpod101.com. |
DIALOGUE |
Laura: Cosa c’è? |
John: Spendo troppi soldi! |
Laura: Davvero? |
John: Si! |
Laura: Quanto spendi ogni giorno? |
John: Hmm circa 100 euro. |
Laura: Cosa?!? Nessuno spende così tanto! |
Marco: Let’s hear it slowly now. |
Laura: Cosa c’è? |
John: Spendo troppi soldi! |
Laura: Davvero? |
John: Si! |
Laura: Quanto spendi ogni giorno? |
John: Hmm circa 100 euro. |
Laura: Cosa?!? Nessuno spende così tanto! |
Marco: And now, with the translation. |
Laura: Cosa c’è? |
Marco: What's happening? |
John: Spendo troppi soldi! |
Marco: I spend too much money! |
Laura: Davvero? |
Marco: Really? |
John: Si! |
Marco: Yes! |
Laura: Quanto spendi ogni giorno? |
Marco: How much do you spend a day? |
John: Hmm circa 100 euro. |
Marco: Hmm, around one hundred euros. |
Laura: Cosa?!? Nessuno spende così tanto! |
Marco: What?!? Nobody spends that much! |
POST CONVERSATION BANTER |
Marco: Nobody? Somebody must spend that much, right Cinzia? |
Cinzia: Yes, but not me. I don't like spending money I told you. What about you, Marco? |
Marco: I don't know, I don't spend that much. Yes I like to spend a lot all at once, buying technology, all my gadgets! |
Cinzia: We know, we know, Marco! |
Marco: You mean... everybody knows that I like gadgets? |
Cinzia: We've been talking about your addiction in the previous lesson! |
Marco: Addiction? Nah. I just love gadgets. |
Cinzia: Yes, so it's an addiction! |
Marco: Ok. Well, on we go with the show. |
VOCAB LIST |
Marco: Let us take a look at today’s vocabulary. |
Marco: First |
Cinzia: cosa [natural native speed] |
Marco: what |
Cinzia: cosa [slowly - broken down by syllable] |
Cinzia: cosa [natural native speed] |
Marco: Next word |
Cinzia: spendere [natural native speed] |
Marco: to spend |
Cinzia: spendere [slowly - broken down by syllable] |
Cinzia: spendere [natural native speed] |
Marco: Next word |
Cinzia: troppi [natural native speed] |
Marco: too much, too many |
Cinzia: troppi [slowly - broken down by syllable] |
Cinzia: troppi [natural native speed] |
Marco: Next word |
Cinzia: davvero [natural native speed] |
Marco: really, truly, indeed |
Cinzia: davvero [slowly - broken down by syllable] |
Cinzia: davvero [natural native speed] |
Marco: Next word |
Cinzia: ogni [natural native speed] |
Marco: every |
Cinzia: ogni [slowly - broken down by syllable] |
Cinzia: ogni [natural native speed] |
Marco: Next word |
Cinzia: circa [natural native speed] |
Marco: about, around, nearly, circa |
Cinzia: circa [slowly - broken down by syllable] |
Cinzia: circa [natural native speed] |
Marco: And last word |
Cinzia: nessuno [natural native speed] |
Marco: nobody, no one |
Cinzia: nessuno [slowly - broken down by syllable] |
Cinzia: nessuno [natural native speed] |
Marco: Nobody loves me! Nessuno mi ama! |
Cinzia: No! Don’t say that! I love you so much, Marco! |
Marco: Yeah, yeah… she’s winking at me and everybody else in the studio. |
VOCAB AND PHRASE USAGE |
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 cosa. |
Marco: Cinzia, can you give us an example sentence please? |
Cinzia: Cosa hai detto? |
Marco: “What did you say?” We hear this very often in Italian, don't we? |
Cinzia: Yes. OK. The next word is spendere. |
Marco: Let’s have an example. |
Cinzia: Spendo sempre troppi soldi. |
Marco: “I always spend too much money.” |
Cinzia: And it's not me, but Marco. |
Marco: Yes, yes, yes, let's go on. |
Cinzia: Next word is troppi. |
Marco: One example please. |
Cinzia: Mangio troppi dolci. |
Marco: “I eat too many sweets / cakes.” |
Cinzia: Mmm... It's true... |
Marco: It's true? |
Cinzia: I love dolci! |
Marco: And in Italian dolci means well... anything from sweets to candies to cakes to donuts to... |
Cinzia: Yes |
Marco: Stop me here because I'm going forever. |
Cinzia: Yes, and I love everything. |
Marco: On we go! |
Cinzia: The next word we will see is ogni. |
Marco: And the example is? |
Cinzia: Vado in pizzeria ogni Sabato. |
Marco: “I go to the pizzeria every Saturday.” |
Cinzia: The next word we will see is circa |
Marco: And the example is? |
Cinzia: Luca ha circa trent’anni. |
Marco: “Luca is nearly thirty years old.” And be careful trent'anni sounds like one word but as we have seen in the previous lesson it should actually be trenta anni but because the last letter of trenta is a vowel and the starting letter of anni is also a vowel we can drop down the last vowel of trenta, put an apostrophe and read it trent'anni. |
Cinzia: And remember that both ways are correct. Trenta anni and trent'anni. |
Cinzia: The next word we will see is nessuno. |
Marco: And the example is? |
Cinzia: Nessuno conosce il proprio destino. |
Marco: Difficult difficult! “Nobody knows his/her destiny.” Let’s hear it one more time, Cinzia. |
Cinzia: Nessuno conosce il proprio destino. |
Marco: “Nobody knows his/her destiny.” Nice. |
Cinzia: What a deep concept. |
Marco: Yes. Ok then, this wraps it up for the vocabulary usage. |
Lesson focus
|
Cinzia: The second conjugation presente indicativo conjugation is realized by changing the verb’s stem. |
Marco: and adding the endings presented in the following scheme. Now remember, that’s the stem that is what we are left with when we take out the ending, in this case, -ere from the infinitive. So let’s take a look at the conjugation of the regular verb spendere. |
Io spend-o “I spend” |
Tu spend-i “You spend” |
Lui/lei spend-e “He/she spends” |
Noi spend-iamo “We spend” |
Voi spend-ete “You spend” |
Loro spend-ono “They spend” |
Marco: Now Cinzia, we must warn our listeners, that it is important to notice that many verbs belonging to the second conjugation are actually irregular. |
Cinzia: This means that they do not follow the standard rules. Right, Marco? |
Marco: Yes. They can either change the stem or the ending, but rarely they can change both. |
Cinzia: Yes, and then the following modal verbs are the most notable, and widely used. For example. Dovere. |
Marco: "to have to," "to ought to," "must" |
Cinzia: Potere |
Marco: "can," "may" |
Cinzia: Sapere |
Marco: "to know" |
Cinzia: Volere |
Marco: "to want," "to wish". And we shall see these verbs in detail in future lessons, but for now, you can also check their full conjugation in the Grammar Bank, |
Cinzia: under the “Verbs” section. |
Marco: Very good, very good. |
Outro
|
Cinzia: This wraps up today's lesson. |
Marco: Don't forget to try out the Italian Review in the Learning Center, where you'll find test questions, answers and comments on the answers. |
Cinzia: It's a great way to start practicing on your own. |
Marco: Ok. See you again. |
Cinzia: Ciao! A presto! Arrivederci! |
Marco: Ciao! |
Comments
Hide