Salve!
I've recently started learning Italian and noticed that sometimes when forming plural of some words one has to add an extra "h" (e.g. amica - amiche). I guess it's quite logical if you want to preserve pronunciation of a word, but at the same time this doesn't happen with "amico", whose plural is "amici". Is this an exception or a rule with words of different gender? Are there any other examples like in case with "amico/amica"? My Italian vocabulary scope is tiny, so I can't compare, and would be much obliged if you could clear this up for me.
Grazie!
PS: Take a look at these free Italian educational resources: Free module: Resources — Adjectives — Present Tense — Greetings and Introductions
- YpruneFebruary 2015
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Tiziana1977January 2016 |
Tiziana1977January 2016 Digramma: ling. Gruppo di due lettere che rappresenta un solo suono (p.e. ch, gh , ci, gi, gn, sc). Ecco gli altri digrammi. |