39. Wake Up and Smell the Coffee!
June 4th, 2006

“Wake up and smell the coffee”, taken literally. In today’s episode, we are going to describe Jane & Massimo’s morning routine, and by doing so, we are going to learn how to use Italian reflexive verbs. These are verbs having an identical subject and direct object. And you, what do you do when you wake up?
This entry was posted on Sunday, June 4th, 2006 at 9:03 pm and is filed under Beginner. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
8 Responses to "39. Wake Up and Smell the Coffee!"
Dana Says:
June 30th, 2006 at 8:31 amI am really enjoying the podcasts but just noticed that during this episode, Jane apparently has breakfast and then goes to work stark naked!
marvin Says:
January 28th, 2008 at 3:33 amciao,
I have a question about the pronunciation of pettino and pettina. In the podcast the accent for ‘pettino’ came at the ‘i’ of ‘ino’. But for pettina, I heard the accent on the ‘e’ of ‘pe’. Did I hear correctly? And if I did hear coorectly, why the accent change?
LearnItalianPod.com Says:
January 28th, 2008 at 11:41 amMarvin, with the verb “pettinare” the accent should be on the ‘e’ of ‘pe’. Where exactly did you hear the accent on the ‘i’ of ‘ino’? I went through the podcast and could not find it.
marvin Says:
January 29th, 2008 at 4:49 amThanks for checking…I just need to improve my listening skills…
Ciao!
Ludwig Says:
March 5th, 2008 at 6:19 amA question about “alzarsi” vs. “svegliarsi”. Does “alzarsi” mean “to get up” whereas “svegliarsi” is “to wake up”?
LearnItalianPod.com Says:
March 5th, 2008 at 11:07 pmLudwig - that is correct. In the “everyday” language, the two verbs are used interchangeably.
Ludwig Says:
March 9th, 2008 at 9:31 amHere in Lesson 39 we see “ogni sera…” etc. In Lesson 29 we saw “tutte le settimane…” etc. Are there just two sets of completely interchangeable phrases here (e.g. could I say “tutte le sere…”) or are some of the possibilities not idiomatic and not used?
LearnItalianPod.com Says:
March 12th, 2008 at 10:47 pmAs a general rule, expressions like “ogni sera” and “tutte le sere”, “ogni giorno, settimana, etc” and “tutti i giorni, le settimane, etc.” are interchangeable.
Leave a Reply
CATEGORIES
- Advanced (12)
- Beginner (50)
- Culture Shot (30)
- How To Italian (29)
- Intermediate (50)
- Phrasebook (10)
- Upper Intermediate (3)
PRACTICE ITALIAN "THE ESPRESSO WAY"
The Turbo-Charged way of practicing Italian has finally arrived!
Get Yours Now!VOTE FOR US!
Review and vote our podcast on iTunes. [Click the button below to visit the LearnItalianPod iTunes Homepage. Once there click "Write a Review"]
Vote for us at Podcast Alley. [Click the button below to vote]
RSS FEEDS
MONTHLY ARCHIVES
RECENT COMMENTS
Mario: Quanti soldi!
muhammad ali: thank you for putting this online
LearnItalianPod.com: Bill, no - it’s only those...
LearnItalianPod.com: Canice, “gli” is actually singular but...
Laura: I love the way you explain...
canice: Ciao Jane and Massimo, ...
Bill: Does the PP always agree in...
LearnItalianPod.com: Signe, “presentazione” is a female noun...
Signe: Concerning Direct object pronouns, this...
LearnItalianPod.com: Bill - great point! Actually, there...
Bill: In the expanded vocabulary section is...
roberto: “dire il vero”= “dire la verita’”...
LearnItalianPod.com: Marino, Italo used to be a...
Nessa Durcan: Questa nuova leziona é molto buona...
dominic: great episode!! i am coming to...






