Breakdown of Sebbene l’hula-hoop sembri pesante, lei è molto abile e non lo fa mai cadere.
essere
to be
molto
very
e
and
non
not
lo
it
lei
she
pesante
heavy
mai
ever
sebbene
although
sembrare
to look
l’hula-hoop
the hula hoop
abile
skilful
fare cadere
to let fall
Questions & Answers about Sebbene l’hula-hoop sembri pesante, lei è molto abile e non lo fa mai cadere.
What does sebbene indicate in this sentence?
Sebbene is a subordinating conjunction meaning “although” or “even though.” It introduces a concessive clause and in Italian normally requires the subjunctive mood in the subordinate verb.
Why is the verb sembri in the present subjunctive rather than the indicative sembra?
Because sebbene triggers the subjunctive. The form sembri is the third-person singular present subjunctive of sembrare (“to seem”).
Why do we write l’hula-hoop with an apostrophe instead of il hula-hoop?
Who does lei refer to in the sentence? The hoop or a person?
Why is lo used before fa and what does it refer to?
What does the construction far cadere mean, and why is it used here?
Why is mai placed between fa and cadere in non lo fa mai cadere?
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