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Is it necessary to use pronouns with the verb “essere”?


Is ‘cosare’ equivalent to the generic use of ‘do’ in English?Should I use the preposition before the infinitive verb form?Is 'si dispiace' ever an acceptable form of the verb dispiacere?Does the verb “scendere” need “avere” or “essere”?Correct usage of DiventareWhen to use the verb “cercare” and when to use the verb “guardare”?“Andare” + present gerund in ~1740's Italian?Could a translation error lead to squares to not be considered as rectangles?Come tradurre “present perfect continuous” dall'inglese?When can we use “sparare” as transitive verb?













5















I'm learning Italian (at the beginner level) and the teacher said that it is necessary to use pronouns with the verb "essere" in all cases. For example: Io sono, loro sono, etc.



Is it normal to build sentences without it? For example, "Sono italiana" or "Sono a casa".










share|improve this question









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Julia G is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 1





    Welcome on ItalianSE!!!

    – abarisone
    3 hours ago















5















I'm learning Italian (at the beginner level) and the teacher said that it is necessary to use pronouns with the verb "essere" in all cases. For example: Io sono, loro sono, etc.



Is it normal to build sentences without it? For example, "Sono italiana" or "Sono a casa".










share|improve this question









New contributor




Julia G is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 1





    Welcome on ItalianSE!!!

    – abarisone
    3 hours ago













5












5








5








I'm learning Italian (at the beginner level) and the teacher said that it is necessary to use pronouns with the verb "essere" in all cases. For example: Io sono, loro sono, etc.



Is it normal to build sentences without it? For example, "Sono italiana" or "Sono a casa".










share|improve this question









New contributor




Julia G is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I'm learning Italian (at the beginner level) and the teacher said that it is necessary to use pronouns with the verb "essere" in all cases. For example: Io sono, loro sono, etc.



Is it normal to build sentences without it? For example, "Sono italiana" or "Sono a casa".







word-usage verbs pronouns






share|improve this question









New contributor




Julia G is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Julia G is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 24 mins ago









egreg

12.1k31848




12.1k31848






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asked 4 hours ago









Julia GJulia G

261




261




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New contributor





Julia G is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Julia G is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







  • 1





    Welcome on ItalianSE!!!

    – abarisone
    3 hours ago












  • 1





    Welcome on ItalianSE!!!

    – abarisone
    3 hours ago







1




1





Welcome on ItalianSE!!!

– abarisone
3 hours ago





Welcome on ItalianSE!!!

– abarisone
3 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















3














No, it is not necessary to use personal pronouns with any verb, in particular not with the verb essere. Using a technical language we can say that Italian is not a "subject obligate" language.



Rather than references (any decent grammar book will give you the rules) let me give you a bunch of examples:




Sono a casa! (I'm home)



Se tutto va bene, siamo rovinati (If everything goes well, we're ruined)



Sono solo come un cane! (I'm as alone as a dog, i.e. I'm totally alone)







share|improve this answer























  • A more common terminology is “Italian is a pro-drop language”.

    – egreg
    22 mins ago


















0














Your teacher is wrong and your examples are perfect.



The subject pronoun can be used, for emphasis or for marking distinctions: I would say




Io sono italiano, lei è catalana.




when asked about me and my fellow moderator Charo. But if asked “Di che nazionalità sei?", I'd answer




Sono italiano.




because no emphasis or distinction is necessary.



The subject pronoun is mandatory when there is no predicate (noun or adjective). For instance, a mother asks her children Chi ha mangiato le caramelle? (Who ate the candies?). The guilty party would answer Sono stato io (I did). Note the inversion (that is not done in some dialects, though).





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    2 Answers
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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    3














    No, it is not necessary to use personal pronouns with any verb, in particular not with the verb essere. Using a technical language we can say that Italian is not a "subject obligate" language.



    Rather than references (any decent grammar book will give you the rules) let me give you a bunch of examples:




    Sono a casa! (I'm home)



    Se tutto va bene, siamo rovinati (If everything goes well, we're ruined)



    Sono solo come un cane! (I'm as alone as a dog, i.e. I'm totally alone)







    share|improve this answer























    • A more common terminology is “Italian is a pro-drop language”.

      – egreg
      22 mins ago















    3














    No, it is not necessary to use personal pronouns with any verb, in particular not with the verb essere. Using a technical language we can say that Italian is not a "subject obligate" language.



    Rather than references (any decent grammar book will give you the rules) let me give you a bunch of examples:




    Sono a casa! (I'm home)



    Se tutto va bene, siamo rovinati (If everything goes well, we're ruined)



    Sono solo come un cane! (I'm as alone as a dog, i.e. I'm totally alone)







    share|improve this answer























    • A more common terminology is “Italian is a pro-drop language”.

      – egreg
      22 mins ago













    3












    3








    3







    No, it is not necessary to use personal pronouns with any verb, in particular not with the verb essere. Using a technical language we can say that Italian is not a "subject obligate" language.



    Rather than references (any decent grammar book will give you the rules) let me give you a bunch of examples:




    Sono a casa! (I'm home)



    Se tutto va bene, siamo rovinati (If everything goes well, we're ruined)



    Sono solo come un cane! (I'm as alone as a dog, i.e. I'm totally alone)







    share|improve this answer













    No, it is not necessary to use personal pronouns with any verb, in particular not with the verb essere. Using a technical language we can say that Italian is not a "subject obligate" language.



    Rather than references (any decent grammar book will give you the rules) let me give you a bunch of examples:




    Sono a casa! (I'm home)



    Se tutto va bene, siamo rovinati (If everything goes well, we're ruined)



    Sono solo come un cane! (I'm as alone as a dog, i.e. I'm totally alone)








    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered 58 mins ago









    Denis NardinDenis Nardin

    6,78721538




    6,78721538












    • A more common terminology is “Italian is a pro-drop language”.

      – egreg
      22 mins ago

















    • A more common terminology is “Italian is a pro-drop language”.

      – egreg
      22 mins ago
















    A more common terminology is “Italian is a pro-drop language”.

    – egreg
    22 mins ago





    A more common terminology is “Italian is a pro-drop language”.

    – egreg
    22 mins ago











    0














    Your teacher is wrong and your examples are perfect.



    The subject pronoun can be used, for emphasis or for marking distinctions: I would say




    Io sono italiano, lei è catalana.




    when asked about me and my fellow moderator Charo. But if asked “Di che nazionalità sei?", I'd answer




    Sono italiano.




    because no emphasis or distinction is necessary.



    The subject pronoun is mandatory when there is no predicate (noun or adjective). For instance, a mother asks her children Chi ha mangiato le caramelle? (Who ate the candies?). The guilty party would answer Sono stato io (I did). Note the inversion (that is not done in some dialects, though).





    share



























      0














      Your teacher is wrong and your examples are perfect.



      The subject pronoun can be used, for emphasis or for marking distinctions: I would say




      Io sono italiano, lei è catalana.




      when asked about me and my fellow moderator Charo. But if asked “Di che nazionalità sei?", I'd answer




      Sono italiano.




      because no emphasis or distinction is necessary.



      The subject pronoun is mandatory when there is no predicate (noun or adjective). For instance, a mother asks her children Chi ha mangiato le caramelle? (Who ate the candies?). The guilty party would answer Sono stato io (I did). Note the inversion (that is not done in some dialects, though).





      share

























        0












        0








        0







        Your teacher is wrong and your examples are perfect.



        The subject pronoun can be used, for emphasis or for marking distinctions: I would say




        Io sono italiano, lei è catalana.




        when asked about me and my fellow moderator Charo. But if asked “Di che nazionalità sei?", I'd answer




        Sono italiano.




        because no emphasis or distinction is necessary.



        The subject pronoun is mandatory when there is no predicate (noun or adjective). For instance, a mother asks her children Chi ha mangiato le caramelle? (Who ate the candies?). The guilty party would answer Sono stato io (I did). Note the inversion (that is not done in some dialects, though).





        share













        Your teacher is wrong and your examples are perfect.



        The subject pronoun can be used, for emphasis or for marking distinctions: I would say




        Io sono italiano, lei è catalana.




        when asked about me and my fellow moderator Charo. But if asked “Di che nazionalità sei?", I'd answer




        Sono italiano.




        because no emphasis or distinction is necessary.



        The subject pronoun is mandatory when there is no predicate (noun or adjective). For instance, a mother asks her children Chi ha mangiato le caramelle? (Who ate the candies?). The guilty party would answer Sono stato io (I did). Note the inversion (that is not done in some dialects, though).






        share











        share


        share










        answered 52 secs ago









        egregegreg

        12.1k31848




        12.1k31848




















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