Breakdown of Né la cameriera né la parrucchiera lavorano la domenica.
lavorare
to work
la domenica
the Sunday
la parrucchiera
the hairdresser
la cameriera
the waitress
né ... né
neither ... nor
Questions & Answers about Né la cameriera né la parrucchiera lavorano la domenica.
Why is the verb plural “lavorano” when each profession is singular?
Do I also need “non,” like “Né la cameriera né la parrucchiera non lavorano…”?
No. When né … né … comes before the verb (as here), it already carries the negation, so adding non is redundant and non‑standard.
- Correct: Né la cameriera né la parrucchiera lavorano la domenica.
- However, if the né … né … part comes after the verb, you do need non:
• Subjects after the verb: Non lavora / Non lavorano né la cameriera né la parrucchiera.
• Objects/complements after the verb: Non lavorano né il sabato né la domenica.
Can I use a singular verb instead of “lavorano”?
Why does “né” have an accent? Is it different from “ne”?
Yes. né (with acute accent) is the conjunction meaning “neither/nor.” The accent is obligatory in writing. ne (no accent) is a clitic pronoun meaning “of it/them; from there,” as in Ne ho due (“I have two of them”). Don’t confuse né with è (“is”), which has a grave accent.
What’s the difference between “la domenica,” “di domenica,” and just “domenica”?
- la domenica = “on Sundays” in a habitual sense (every Sunday).
- di domenica = also habitual; stylistic variant of similar meaning.
- domenica (no article) typically means “on Sunday” referring to a specific Sunday (often the next one): Domenica non lavoro.
You can also say ogni domenica or tutte le domeniche for clarity.
Why is it “la domenica” and not “il domenica”?
Do I need a comma before the second “né”?
No. né … né … is a correlative conjunction and normally takes no comma: Né la cameriera né la parrucchiera… A comma could appear only to mark an unusual pause or added phrase, not as the default.
Do the articles “la” before the professions imply specific people?
Yes. La cameriera and la parrucchiera with definite articles point to specific women known in context (“the waitress,” “the hairdresser”).
If you mean the professions in general, use plurals: Né i camerieri né i parrucchieri lavorano la domenica.
Bare singulars without articles (e.g., né cameriera né parrucchiera) are unusual as subjects; they’re fine in predicate position after verbs like fare/essere: Non fa né la cameriera né la parrucchiera.
Can I list more than two items with “né”?
Can “né … né …” connect objects or time phrases too, not just subjects?
Is “parrucchiera” spelled correctly? Why the H and the double letters?
Are days of the week capitalized in Italian?
No. They’re lowercase in running text: lunedì, martedì, domenica. Capitalize only at the start of a sentence or in certain titles/headings.
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