quarto_try: A picture of an Italian flag with the caption “gonna mess this up” superimposed on it. (Default)
I’ve been reinforcing the new words I’ve learned, adding a few new verbs like dovere (to have to, must), some nouns (un cavallo = a horse, un gato = a cat, un cane = a dog) because if I’m learning like a toddler then animals should definitely be early on the list. 😂 Also I just like talking (parlare = to talk) about animals.

The big development today was that the verb tense that you use for simple present (as in “I’m about to do something right now” or tell someone to do something, like “I eat” or “you help”) came up in my lessons. Italian verbs, as you may have already noticed, generally end in one of three ways: with a suffix of -are, -ire, or -ere. Verbs are conjugated by dropping that suffix and sticking something else on the end based on both the pronoun used and whether it’s an -are, -ere, or -ire.

Four of the pronouns are simpler, because they’re the same regardless of suffix: “io” uses -o (parlare becomes parlo - I talk), tu uses -i (leggere becomes leggi - you read), and noi uses -iamo (dovere becomes doviamo - we have to). Voi drops the R in the suffix and replaces it with T. (Officially it drops all the suffix and uses -ate for -are verbs, -ete for -ere verbs, and -ite for -ire verbs, but it’s easier for me to just think “swap the last R for a T to conjugate voi”).

But from there it’s more complicated. For lui/lei/Lei, it uses -a if it’s an -are verb, or -e if it’s an -ere or -ire verb. Loro uses -ano for -are verbs and -ono for -ere and -ire verbs.

Well, this is where memorization comes in. Learning like a toddler doesn’t mean never memorizing things and learning rules; it just means to pick things up naturally as you need them, practice by using them, and don’t be afraid to make mistakes.

What I can do now:
Ciao, mi gato. Tu mangi, bambino. Noi vidiamo a bella gato mangio.

Translate: “Hello, my cat. You eat, child. We see a beautiful cat eat.”

Day 3

Jan. 29th, 2023 10:47 pm
quarto_try: A picture of an Italian flag with the caption “gonna mess this up” superimposed on it. (Default)
I’ve learned some verbs over the past couple days. Essere = to be. I vaguely remember that this and, I think, avere are two of the most important verbs in Italian.) Avere = to have. Stare = to stay, to be. (I vaguely remember that while both essere and stare mean “to be”, you use one in certain contexts and the other in other contexts, but I no longer remember the difference. I’ll just run with using essere for now and learn the rules later.) Andare = to go. Fare = to do, to make. Potere = to be able to. Imparare = to learn. Volere = to want. Aiutare = to help. Abitare = to live in, to inhabit. Piacere = to like. (So it seems to have multiple contexts - “piacere” means both the verb “to like” but also “pleased to meet you”.)

I also learned Covid vocabulary, which is important to me as a high-risk person whose life has become very circumscribed by Covid. A lot of the terms are more specialized, like polmonite (pneumonia) or diffusione globale (global spread), but some are very relevant to my life. Isolamente a casa = home isolation. Allontanamento sociale = social distancing. Mascherina = mask.

Some connective words were learned, such as e = and, é = is, a = to, ma = but, perché = because, and anche = also.

What I can do has opened up now that I have some verbs, even though I have no conjugations yet so it will definitely be very clunky:
Io sono Robin. Sono disabilite e sono abitare isolamento a casa, perché Covid-19 é molto male.

Google Translate returned: “I'm Robin. I am disabled and I am living isolation at home, because Covid-19 is very bad.” While this is somewhat ambiguous (am I currently in isolation due to having bad Covid, or am I living in isolation indefinitely because Covid-19 is too dangerous?), it’s a good start.

Day 1

Jan. 27th, 2023 10:39 pm
quarto_try: A picture of an Italian flag with the caption “gonna mess this up” superimposed on it. (Default)
I’m starting with Babbel, so day 1 was real basic, but that’s okay because I’ve forgotten pretty much everything I knew five years ago.

Io sono = I am. Mi chiamo = my name is. Personal pronouns: io = I, tu = (informal) you, lui = he, lei = she, noi = we, voi = (informal) them, Lei = (formal) you, Loro = (formal) them. Del = from. Piacere = it’s nice to meet you. Come stai = (informal) how are you. Come sta = (formal) how are you. Buongiorno = good day. Ciao = (informal) hello/bye. Arrivederci = goodbye. Molto bene = very good.

What I can do today:
Piacere. Mi chiamo Robin, del Canada. Come stai? Molto bene. Ciao!

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