Questions & Answers about Il raffreddore è fastidioso.
Why is the definite article Il used? Why not just say Raffreddore è fastidioso or Un raffreddore è fastidioso?
Italian normally requires an article with singular countable nouns. To talk about a thing in general (the class as a whole), Italian prefers the definite article: Il raffreddore è fastidioso = colds are annoying (in general). Bare Raffreddore è fastidioso is ungrammatical. Un raffreddore è fastidioso would refer to an individual case (“a cold is annoying”) and sounds odd as a general statement unless you’re contrasting it with something else.
Could I also say I raffreddori sono fastidiosi?
What gender is raffreddore, and how do I know?
Why is the adjective fastidioso masculine and singular here?
Why è with an accent, and which accent is it?
È is the 3rd-person singular of essere (to be), and it must take a grave accent (è) to distinguish it from e (the conjunction “and”). The grave accent also marks the open vowel quality. Don’t write é or plain e here.
Why è and not sta?
Can the adjective go before the noun, like Il fastidioso raffreddore?
Can I change the word order to emphasize the adjective, like È fastidioso il raffreddore?
How do you pronounce raffreddore and where is the stress?
Syllables: raf-fred-do-re. There are double consonants ff and dd; hold them slightly longer. The stress falls on the third syllable: raf-fred-DO-re. Try to roll the rs lightly.
What’s the difference between fastidioso and fastidio?
How do Italians usually say “I have a cold”?
Are there natural alternatives to fastidioso?
Yes, with slightly different tones:
- Neutral/common: seccante, noioso (here = “tiresome”), spiacevole.
- Colloquial: scocciante, una seccatura, una scocciatura, una rottura (very informal). Example: Il raffreddore è una seccatura.
How would I intensify it?
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