La professoressa segna l’assenza di Luca nel registro.

Breakdown of La professoressa segna l’assenza di Luca nel registro.

di
of
in
in
Luca
Luca
segnare
to mark
la professoressa
the teacher
il registro
the register
l'assenza
the absence

Questions & Answers about La professoressa segna l’assenza di Luca nel registro.

Why is it la professoressa and not just professoressa?

La is the definite article, meaning the. In Italian, articles are used more often than in English, so la professoressa is the normal way to say the teacher / the female teacher / the professor depending on context.

A few useful points:

  • professoressa is feminine singular
  • la is the feminine singular definite article
  • together: la professoressa = the teacher / the female professor

In some situations, Italian can drop the article, but here la professoressa sounds natural and standard.

What does professoressa mean exactly? Is it always professor?

Not always. In Italian, professoressa can refer to:

  • a female professor
  • a female teacher, especially in a school context

In this sentence, because of registro and assenza, it most likely means the teacher at school.

The masculine form is professore.

Why is it segna? What form is that?

Segna is the third-person singular present tense of the verb segnare.

So:

  • io segno = I mark / I note down
  • tu segni = you mark
  • lui/lei segna = he/she marks

Since the subject is la professoressa, we use segna:

  • La professoressa segna... = The teacher marks / notes down...

Here the present tense can often be translated naturally into English as:

  • marks
  • records
  • notes down
What does segnare mean here? Is it literally to sign?

No. Although segnare can have several meanings, here it means something like:

  • to mark
  • to note down
  • to record

So segna l’assenza means the teacher is recording the absence.

This is different from:

  • firmare = to sign
  • disegnare = to draw

So in this sentence, segnare is about making an official note in a record.

Why is it l’assenza and not la assenza?

Because assenza begins with a vowel, la becomes l’ before it.

So:

  • la + assenzal’assenza

This is called elision. It is very common in Italian.

Other examples:

  • l’amica = the female friend
  • l’idea = the idea
  • l’acqua = the water

Even though the full article is la, it changes to l’ before a vowel.

Why is there an article in l’assenza di Luca? Why not just assenza di Luca?

Italian often uses the definite article where English may or may not use the.

Here, l’assenza di Luca means:

  • Luca’s absence
  • or more literally, the absence of Luca

Using the article makes the phrase sound complete and natural in Italian. Without it, the sentence would sound less standard in this context.

So:

  • l’assenza di Luca = Luca’s absence
Why does Italian use di Luca instead of something like Luca’s?

Italian usually expresses possession with di, especially in noun phrases like this.

So:

  • l’assenza di Luca = literally the absence of Luca
  • natural English: Luca’s absence

Italian does not normally add something like English ’s to the name. Instead, it uses di:

  • il libro di Marco = Marco’s book
  • la macchina di Anna = Anna’s car

So di is a very common way to show possession or relationship.

What is nel registro? How is nel formed?

Nel is a contraction of:

  • in + il = nel

So:

This is very common in Italian. Some other combinations are:

  • in + lo = nello
  • in + la = nella
  • in + i = nei
  • in + gli = negli
  • in + le = nelle

Since registro is masculine singular and takes il, we get:

  • in il registronel registro
What does registro mean here?

Here registro means a class register, attendance book, or official school record where the teacher writes things like absences, grades, or notes.

It does not mean register in the sense of a cash register.

So in this sentence:

  • nel registro = in the class register / in the attendance record

Context matters a lot with this word.

Why is the order segna l’assenza di Luca nel registro? Could nel registro go somewhere else?

Yes, Italian word order is fairly flexible, though some orders sound more neutral than others.

The given sentence is a normal, natural order:

This places nel registro after the object phrase and tells you where the action is recorded.

You could also hear:

  • La professoressa segna nel registro l’assenza di Luca.

That is also grammatical. It puts slightly more focus on nel registro earlier in the sentence.

So both are possible, but the original version is very natural and straightforward.

Is Luca the subject of the sentence?

No. La professoressa is the subject.

You can tell because:

  • segna matches la professoressa = she marks
  • Luca appears inside the phrase l’assenza di Luca

So Luca is not doing the action. The teacher is doing the action, and what she records is Luca’s absence.

Breakdown:

  • La professoressa = subject
  • segna = verb
  • l’assenza di Luca = object
  • nel registro = place / location of the recording
Could this sentence mean The teacher marks Luca absent?

Yes, that is a very natural English way to express the idea.

Literally, the Italian is closer to:

  • The teacher records Luca’s absence in the register.

But in natural English, depending on context, you could also say:

  • The teacher marks Luca absent.
  • The teacher notes Luca’s absence in the register.
  • The teacher records that Luca is absent.

So the exact English wording can vary, even though the Italian structure stays the same.

Why doesn’t the sentence use è assente?

Because the sentence is not directly saying Luca is absent. Instead, it focuses on the teacher’s action of recording that absence.

Compare:

  • Luca è assente.
    = Luca is absent.

  • La professoressa segna l’assenza di Luca nel registro.
    = The teacher records Luca’s absence in the register.

So:

  • è assente describes Luca’s state
  • segna l’assenza describes the teacher’s action

They are related in meaning, but the grammar and focus are different.

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