Breakdown of Prendo il secchio e lo riempio d’acqua, poi bagno lo straccio.
io
I
prendere
to take
di
of
l'acqua
the water
e
and
poi
then
bagnare
to wet
lo
it
riempire
to fill
il secchio
the bucket
lo straccio
the rag
Questions & Answers about Prendo il secchio e lo riempio d’acqua, poi bagno lo straccio.
In "lo riempio," what does "lo" refer to, and why is it "lo"?
Why is it "d’acqua" and not "con acqua"?
What’s the difference between the "lo" in "lo riempio" and the "lo" in "lo straccio"?
Do I need an article before "acqua"? Is "dell’acqua" possible?
Is "riempio" one of those -ire verbs that take -isc?
Where does the object pronoun go? Could I say "riempio lo"?
Why not "gli riempio" if "secchio" is masculine?
Because gli is (mainly) an indirect object pronoun meaning "to him/for him" (and in modern usage often "to them"). The thing being filled (the bucket) is a direct object, so you need lo. You can say: Gli riempio il bicchiere = I fill his glass (gli = to him; il bicchiere = direct object).
Could I drop the pronoun and repeat the noun? "Prendo il secchio e riempio il secchio."
Is the comma before "poi" necessary?
Does "poi" mean the same as "allora"?
Why is it "lo straccio" and not "il straccio"?
What’s the difference between "bagno lo straccio" and "mi bagno"?
How would I say the whole thing in the past?
Perfective past (passato prossimo):
Could I also pronominalize "lo straccio" as "poi lo bagno"?
Why is there an apostrophe in "d’acqua"?
Any pronunciation tips for tricky words here?
- riempio: roughly "ree-EM-pyo" (stress on EM; the group -empio sounds like -em-pyo).
- straccio: "STRAH-cho" (the "cc" before i/e yields a "ch" as in "church," then "o").
- secchio: "SEK-kyo" (double c + h = hard k; "chio" sounds like "kyo").
- bagno: "BAHN-nyo" (the "gn" is like Spanish ñ).
- acqua: "AHK-kwa" (double c + q = strong k sound).
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