Breakdown of Metto l’asciugamano sul tavolo.
io
I
su
on
il tavolo
the table
mettere
to put
l’asciugamano
the towel
Questions & Answers about Metto l’asciugamano sul tavolo.
What is the function of the verb metto here and how is it conjugated?
Metto is the first-person-singular present indicative of mettere (to put/place). It means I put or I am putting. In Italian you normally drop the subject pronoun io because the ending -o already tells you it’s “I.”
Why is there an apostrophe in l’asciugamano, and what article is that?
Why do we use sul instead of su il, and what does sul mean?
Could I say sopra instead of su? What’s the difference between su and sopra?
Why does the sentence use the definite article before asciugamano and tavolo? In English I might say “a towel” or “a table.”
Italian uses definite articles more than English when referring to specific items. Here you’re talking about “the towel” and “the table” that you and the listener know. If you meant any towel on any table, you’d use the indefinite article: Metto un asciugamano su un tavolo.
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