Italian Word of the Day: Lucciola (firefly) https://dailyitalianwords.com/....italian-word-lucciol
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Italian Word of the Day: Lucciola (firefly) https://dailyitalianwords.com/....italian-word-lucciol
Italian Word of the Day: Affascinante (fascinating / attractive) https://dailyitalianwords.com/....italian-word-affasci
Italian Idiom of the Week: Farsi mettere i piedi in testa (to let someone push you around) https://dailyitalianwords.com/....italian-idiom-farsi-
Italian Phrases We Use EVERY Day!® How to say “supposed to” in Italian with “Dovere”
Learn Italian: This blog will follow up with how to use the Italian verb "dovere" to represent the English modal phrase "supposed to." In English, there are subtle differences between "should" and "supposed to." In Italian, however, there is not a direct way to translate the English modal phrase "supposed to." "Dovere," with its official translation of "must/have to" is sometimes called upon to take on the meaning of "supposed to" to fill this gap between the two languages. Examples from daily life will be provided to show how "supposed to" is commonly used in English and how to conjugate "dovere" to create an equivalent sentence in Italian.
https://conversationalitalian.....wordpress.com/2025/0
Italian Word of the Day: Sfarfallare (to flit / to flutter) https://dailyitalianwords.com/....italian-word-sfarfal