Questions & Answers about Oggi l’ufficio è pulito.
Why is there an apostrophe in l’ufficio?
Why is the adjective pulito placed after ufficio when in English we say “clean office”?
In Italian, most descriptive adjectives follow the noun they modify. So you say ufficio pulito rather than pulito ufficio. Placing pulito after ufficio is simply the normal word order for a descriptive adjective.
Why is the verb essere used here? Couldn’t we say l’ufficio ha pulito?
What’s the difference between l’ufficio è pulito and l’ufficio è stato pulito?
Why don’t we need a subject pronoun like esso or lui (“it”)?
Can oggi be placed elsewhere in the sentence?
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