Breakdown of Ne abbiamo un altro: mettilo pure sulla porta d’ingresso.
avere
to have
su
on
mettere
to put
noi
we
lo
it
ne
of them
un altro
another one
pure
as well
la porta d’ingresso
the front door
Elon.io is an online learning platform
We have an entire course teaching Italian grammar and vocabulary.
Questions & Answers about Ne abbiamo un altro: mettilo pure sulla porta d’ingresso.
What does ne mean in Ne abbiamo un altro?
Ne is a clitic pronoun that replaces a previously mentioned noun phrase with a partitive or “of them” sense. In Ne abbiamo un altro, it literally means “of them” or “of it,” so the full idea is “We have another one (of those).”
Why is it un altro instead of uno altro?
In Italian, uno is used only before masculine singular nouns beginning with z, s+consonant, ps, pn, x, y, or gn. Since altro begins with a simple consonant (a), the correct indefinite article is un, giving un altro (“another one”).
Why is altro masculine? When would I use altra?
The adjective/pronoun altro agrees in gender and number with the noun it replaces.
- Masculine singular → altro (with un: un altro)
- Feminine singular → altra (with un’: un’altra)
- Plural masculine → altri
- Plural feminine → altre
Here, since we’re referring to a masculine item or simply using the general masculine form, we say un altro.
What nuance does pure add in mettilo pure?
In this context, pure softens or encourages the command: it’s like saying “go ahead and put it” or “feel free to put it.” It doesn’t mean “also” here; it adds a friendly, permissive tone to the imperative.
Why is the verb form mettilo instead of metti lo?
In Italian affirmative imperatives, you attach object pronouns directly to the end of the verb (enclisis). Here:
- Imperative of mettere (tu) → metti
- Direct object pronoun “it” (masculine) → lo
Combine and adjust spelling → metti + lo → mettilo.
How is the 2nd person singular imperative formed for mettere and other verbs?
- For -ere and -ire verbs (like mettere, leggere, dormire), the affirmative tu imperative is identical to the present indicative tu form: tu metti, tu leggi, tu dormi.
- For -are verbs (like parlare, mangiare), the tu imperative uses the 3rd person singular present indicative: parla, mangia.
Why is the direct object pronoun placed after the verb in this sentence?
In an affirmative imperative, Italian encliticizes (attaches) object pronouns to the verb. For negative imperatives, pronouns go before the verb (e.g., Non lo mettere). Here the command is positive, so we get mettilo instead of lo metti.
Why do we say sulla porta d’ingresso instead of su la porta d’ingresso?
Italian prepositions su, a, da, di, in contract with definite articles.
- su + la → sulla
So sulla porta is simply the contracted form of su la porta.
What is the apostrophe doing in d’ingresso?
d’ is the contraction of di + ingresso. When di precedes a word beginning with a vowel, the i is dropped and replaced by an apostrophe:
di + ingresso → d’ ingresso → d’ingresso.
What function does the colon serve in this sentence?
The colon introduces a related instruction or consequence. It links the statement Ne abbiamo un altro (“We have another one”) to the directive mettilo pure sulla porta d’ingresso (“go ahead and put it on the front door”), indicating that what follows is directly tied to what has just been stated.