PURE - PUR - PUR DI: Cosa Significano? Come si Usano? Impara a Parlare ITALIANO come un NATIVO š š
Exercises + Written explanation: https://learnamo.com/vocabolario-mate... LearnAmo Collection: https://teespring.com/stores/learnamo... If you want to stay up to date with the latest contents we publish day by day, follow us on: Facebook: Ā Ā /Ā learnamoĀ Ā Instagram: Ā Ā /Ā learnamoĀ Ā Twitter: Ā Ā /Ā learnamoĀ Ā Todayās lesson will amaze you! In fact, we will see the 7 different meanings of the word PURE! Donāt miss it! PURE in Italian: all meanings and uses Although it might seem absurd, the small word PURE has 7 different meanings in Italian! Letās see all of them! 1. PURE with the meaning of āalsoā First of all, PURE is used with the meaning of āalsoā, therefore to add something. For example: Oggi ho comprato due paia di scarpe e pure un paio di occhiali da sole. (Today I bought two pairs of shoes and also a pair of sunglasses) or Dopo quello che hai fatto, non posso sopportare pure questo! (After what you did, I cannot handle this, too!) Furthermore, with the same meaning, PURE can be used in a negative way to express disagreement, disapproval for something that has not been done but we wish it would. For example: Rocco avrebbe pure potuto avvisarmi prima di andarsene! (Rocco could have told me that he was leaving! ā In this case, Rocco didnāt tell me anything, but I wish he had!) or Maria e Giacomo avrebbero pure potuto dirci che andavano in vacanza da soli⦠(Maria e Giacomo could have told us they were going on holiday alone⦠ā They didnāt tell us anything, but we wish they had!) 2. PURE useless PURE can also be used redundantly, in a useless way, when we express a doubt, in order to emphasise our uncertainty. For example: Il suo libro ĆØ davvero brutto⦠BisognerĆ pure dirglielo prima o poi⦠(His book is terrible⦠We should tell him sooner or later⦠ā I donāt know when we will tell him, Iām doubtful) or Prova a dire ai tuoi genitori che hai speso tutta la paghetta per comprare i libri: potrebbero pure crederci! (Try to tell your parents you spent all your pocket money to buy the books: they might believe that! ā Itās not certain they will believe that, maybe yes⦠maybe notā¦) Do you like the T-shirt Graziana is wearing in the video? Buy it for you or for a person you love! You can find it in our online shop LearnAmo Collection! 3. PURE to express boredom The word PURE is also used when we do something without enthusiasm, with boredom, just because they forced us to do it. Usually, there is a condition afterwards. For example: Ok ok⦠andiamo pure al ristorante giapponese stasera! Ma se troviamo tutto pieno non lamentatevi! (Ok ok⦠Letās go to the Japanese restaurant tonight! But if itās full, donāt complain! ā I wouldnāt like to go there, but at the end I accepted because they insistedā¦) or Luca e Paolo possono pure venire al cinema con noi. Ma se cominciano a urlare, non prendetevela con me! Io non li volevo! (Luca and Paolo can come to the cinema with us. But if they start shouting, donāt blame me! I didnāt want them! ā I would have preferred they didnāt come, but at the end I agreedā¦) todayās nugget fare/costruire castelli in aria = build castles in the air For example: Rocco fa sempre castelli in aria: ĆØ convinto che LearnAmo raggiungerĆ 100 mila iscritti entro la fine dellāanno! (Rocco always builds castles in the air: he thinks LearnAmo will reach 100k subscribers by the end of the year! ā Do you think itās possible? :-D) 4. PURE as encouragement PURE is also used after a verb in the imperative mood (formal and informa), to emphasise a command, to encourage someone to do or tell something! For example: Prego, signora, venga pure! (Please, come in, maāam!) or Dimmi pure! Che succede? (Just tell me! Whatās up?) 5. PURE with the meaning of āevenā PURE can also mean āevenā. For example: Lo ama cosƬ tanto che darebbe pure la vita per lui! (She loves him so much she would even die for him!) 6. PURE with the meaning of āeven ifā, āalthoughā PURE can also introduce concessive clauses! In fact, if we use it after a subjunctive, it means āanche seā (even if); while, if we use if before a gerund, (PUR), it takes the meaning of āsebbeneā or ānonostanteā (although). For example: Fosse pure il ragazzo più bello del mondo, Paola non lo sposerebbe mai. (Even if he were the most handsome boy in the world, Paola would never marry him) or Pur avendo studiato molto, Giuseppe ĆØ stato bocciato. (Although he studied a lot, Giuseppe didnāt pass the exam) ANCHE SE + subjunctive? Why? Find out all the concessive clauses with our lesson!

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