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Italian Grammar

1. Nouns – gender

  • Introduction

  • 1. Nouns – gender
  • 2. Nouns – number
  • 3. Articles
  • 4. Personal pronouns
  • 5. Adjectives
  • 6. Verb types -are/-ere/-ire
  • 7. Past tense
  • 8. The auxiliary verbs essere and avere
  • 9. Prepositions
  • 10. The use of si
  • Introduction

  • 1. Nouns – gender

  • 2. Nouns – number

  • 3. Articles

  • 4. Personal pronouns

  • 5. Adjectives

  • 6. Verb types -are/-ere/-ire

  • 7. Past tense

  • 8. The auxiliary verbs essere and avere

  • 9. Prepositions

  • 10. The use of si

1. Nouns – gender

In Italian, nouns are either masculine or feminine by gender.

The gender of living things is determined by their biological gender: l’uomo man – la donna woman, il gatto cat – la gatta female cat

The gender of non-living things is random and therefore purely grammatical.

Masculine nouns usually end in -o: il giorno day, il libro book, il tavolo table.

Exceptions: la mano hand, la radio radio, la foto photograph (abbreviated form of la fotografia).

They also sometimes end in -e: il sole sun, il latte milk, il dente tooth.

Most of these nouns have one of the following endings: -are, -ore, -one, -ale, -ile, -ule, -ante, -ente:

il mare sea
il colore colour
il balcone balcony
il giornale newspaper
il campanile church tower
l’istante moment
l’incidente accident

Finally, masculine nouns sometimes end in a consonant, and these are of foreign origin: il film movie, lo sport sport, il bar bar, il computer computer.

The following categories usually consist of masculine nouns: plants, months and weekdays (exception: la domenica Sunday), the names of seas, mountains, rivers and lakes, as well as cardinal points. There are of course exceptions.

Feminine nouns usually end in -a: la casa house, la luna moon, la sera evening.

Exception: nouns ending in –ma (excluding la mamma mum) are masculine, e.g. il problema problem, il sistema system, il programma program, il pigiama pyjamas.

Feminine nouns also sometimes end in –e: la notte night, l’estate summer, la chiave key.

Most of these nouns have one of the following endings: -ione, -aggine, -igine, -uggine:

la colazione breakfast
la stupidaggine stupid thing
l’origine origin
la ruggine rust

Nouns that end in -i also tend to be feminine: la crisi crisis, la diagnosi diagnosis.

The same goes for nouns that end in –tà or –tù: la città city, la gioventù youth.

The following categories usually consist of feminine nouns: fruits, continents, countries, areas, cities and islands as well as the names of festivities. There are exceptions here, too.

Learn Italian
Beginning 2. Nouns – number
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