Breakdown of L’attore dice che vorrebbe provare una parte diversa nel prossimo spettacolo.
volere
to want
in
in
prossimo
next
provare
to try
che
that
la parte
the part
diverso
different
dire
to say
l'attore
the actor
il spettacolo
the show
Questions & Answers about L’attore dice che vorrebbe provare una parte diversa nel prossimo spettacolo.
What does L’ in L’attore stand for?
Why do we use che after dice?
Why is vorrebbe in the conditional mood, and not the future or present?
Vorrebbe is the third-person singular conditional of volere (“would like”). It expresses a desire or polite wish.
- If you used vorrà, that would be future tense (“he will want”), which states a plan or certainty rather than a wish.
- If you used vuole, that’d be present indicative (“he wants”), more direct and less polite than “would like.”
Why isn’t the subjunctive used after dice che?
With verbs of saying (dire, affermare, chiedere) in an affirmative context, Italian normally uses indicative (or conditional in a wish) in the subordinate clause. The subjunctive is reserved for expressing doubt, emotion, necessity, or when the main clause negates or questions the truth of the statement. Here it’s a straightforward report of a desire, so no subjunctive.
Why do we follow vorrebbe with the infinitive provare instead of a finite verb form?
After modal verbs or verbs of desire like volere in the conditional, Italian uses the infinitive of the main verb:
• vorrebbe provare = “he would like to try.”
Finite verbs would require a conjunction plus another finite verb (e.g. “vorrebbe che provasse”), which changes meaning and requires subjunctive.
Could we use a different word instead of parte for “role”?
Why is the adjective diversa placed after parte? Could we say una diversa parte?
What is nel in nel prossimo spettacolo, and could we say al prossimo spettacolo instead?
Why do we use prossimo here and where does it go?
Prossimo means “next” (in time). It agrees in gender and number with spettacolo (masculine singular). In Italian, adjectives of time (prossimo, scorso, futuro) can come before or after the noun, but “prossimo spettacolo” is the most common word order.
AI Language TutorTry it ↗
“What's the best way to learn Italian grammar?”
Italian grammar becomes intuitive with practice. Focus on understanding the core patterns first — how sentences are structured, how verbs change form, and how words relate to each other. Our course breaks these concepts into small lessons so you can build understanding step by step.
Sign up free — start using our AI language tutor
Start learning ItalianMaster Italian — from L’attore dice che vorrebbe provare una parte diversa nel prossimo spettacolo to fluency
All course content and exercises are completely free — no paywalls, no trial periods, no signup needed.
- ✓Infinitely deep — unlimited vocabulary and grammar
- ✓Fast-paced — build complex sentences from the start
- ✓Unforgettable — efficient spaced repetition system
- ✓ AI tutor to answer your grammar questions