Tra pochi giorni, da quel seme spunterà un piccolo germoglio verde.

Breakdown of Tra pochi giorni, da quel seme spunterà un piccolo germoglio verde.

da
from
piccolo
small
il giorno
the day
quel
that
verde
green
pochi
a few
il seme
the seed
tra
in
spuntare
to appear
il germoglio
the sprout
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Questions & Answers about Tra pochi giorni, da quel seme spunterà un piccolo germoglio verde.

What does tra mean in tra pochi giorni, and is it the same as fra?
tra is a preposition meaning “in” when you refer to a future point in time: in a few days. In this temporal sense, tra and fra are completely interchangeable, so you could also say fra pochi giorni.
What function does da have in da quel seme?
Here da indicates origin or starting point, so da quel seme means “from that seed.” It tells you where the action (the sprouting) comes from.
Why is quel used instead of quello before seme?

Italian has different forms of the demonstrative “that” based on gender, number, and the initial letter of the noun:

  • quel is the masculine singular form used before most consonants (including s when followed by a vowel, as in seme).
  • quello is used before masculine nouns beginning with z, s+consonant, gn, ps, pn, x, y. Since seme is masculine singular and starts with s
    • vowel, quel seme is correct.
Why is there a comma after giorni, and is it mandatory?
The comma sets off the introductory time phrase tra pochi giorni. It’s not strictly mandatory, but it helps clarify that the adverbial phrase belongs together and signals a pause you’d naturally make when speaking.
Why is da quel seme placed before the verb spuntarà instead of after?
Italian allows flexible word order for emphasis. Placing da quel seme before the verb highlights the origin (“from that seed”). You could say Spunterà da quel seme un piccolo germoglio verde fra pochi giorni, but the original order feels more dramatic and poetic.
What tense and person is spuntarà, and how is it formed?

spuntarà is the third-person singular of the simple future (futuro semplice) of spuntare. You form it by taking the infinitive stem spuntar- and adding the future ending for lui/lei: io spunterò
tu spunterai
lui/lei spunterà
…etc.

What does spuntare mean here, and how does it differ from crescere?

spuntare literally means “to sprout” or “to emerge” (like a shoot pushing up through soil). It emphasizes the very first appearance.
crescere means “to grow” and applies to the ongoing increase in size once the sprout has already appeared.

Why is un used before piccolo germoglio verde, and could it be omitted?
un is the indefinite article (“a”) introducing piccolo germoglio verde as a non-specific, singular sprout. You cannot omit it without making the phrase ungrammatical; you need an article before the noun phrase.
Why is the adjective order piccolo before the noun and verde after?

In Italian, size/quantity adjectives (like piccolo) typically precede the noun, while descriptive adjectives (like verde, a color) follow it. So piccolo germoglio verde follows the natural order:
[size] + noun + [color].

Why is germoglio masculine, and how can you tell?
Most Italian nouns ending in -o are masculine, and germoglio ends in -o, so it’s masculine. You also see it agrees with masculine forms like un piccolo (not una piccola).