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Questions & Answers about L’ospite arriva nella casa presto.
Why is the article L’ used before ospite?
In Italian, ospite is a masculine noun starting with a vowel (o). When a masculine noun starts with a vowel, Italian often uses the l’ form of the definite article (for instance l’uomo, l’ospite). This is to maintain a smooth flow between words.
Why does the sentence use nella casa instead of a casa?
Nella casa literally means in the house—it emphasizes that the person is arriving inside the physical building. If you say arriva a casa, it can be more general, meaning they arrive at home. Nella casa stresses the location inside the home.
Why does arriva end with -a? I thought verbs in Italian have different endings for each person.
Arriva is the third-person singular (egli/lei/Lei) form of the verb arrivare. In the present indicative tense, the conjugation is (io) arrivo, (tu) arrivi, (lui/lei) arriva, (noi) arriviamo, (voi) arrivate, (loro) arrivano. So here, arriva ends in -a because it’s the lui/lei form, matching l’ospite as a single person.
Can ospite mean both guest and host?
Yes, ospite can mean both guest and host, depending on the context. Usually, the context makes it clear. In this sentence, it means someone visiting or arriving, so it’s interpreted as guest.
When would you use presto versus other words for soon or early in Italian?
Presto generally means soon or early in a broad sense (not too late, before a certain time). Other words can be more specific:
• precoce (precocious, premature) – more formal or relating to something happening earlier than usual.
• prima (before/earlier) – can indicate an earlier point in time compared to something else.
But using presto in day-to-day speech is common and straightforward whenever you mean soon or early.
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