Difference between revisions of "Language/Italian/Vocabulary/longest-word"

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The longest Italian word is '''Precipitevolissimevolmente'''. It is a 26-letter-long adverb.
The longest Italian word is a 26-letter-long adverb:


'''Precipitevolissimevolmente'''.


It means "in a way like someone acts very hastily".  
 
It means "in a way like someone acts very hastily".


It is formed by subsequent addition of postfixes to the original root:
It is formed by subsequent addition of postfixes to the original root:

Revision as of 11:31, 28 March 2020

Longuest-word-in-italian.jpg

Ciao! Italian learners,


The longest Italian word is a 26-letter-long adverb:

Precipitevolissimevolmente.


It means "in a way like someone acts very hastily".

It is formed by subsequent addition of postfixes to the original root:

  1. precipitevole: "hasty"
  2. precipitevolissimo: "very hasty"
  3. precipitevolissimevole: "[of someone/something] that acts very hastily",
  4. precipitevolissimevolmente: "in a way like someone/something that acts very hastily"

The word is never used in every-day language but it is an official part of Italian language.


Other words can be created with a similar (and grammatically correct) mechanism starting from a longer root, winding up with a longer word.


Some examples are:

  • sovramagnificentissimamente (cited by Dante Alighieri in De vulgari eloquentia), 27 letters, "in a way that is more than magnificent by far" (archaic);
  • incontrovertibilissimamente, 27 letters, "in a way that is very difficult to falsify";
  • particolareggiatissimamente, 27 letters, "in an extremely detailed way";
  • anticostituzionalissimamente, 28 letters, "in a way that strongly violates the constitution".


Source

https://preply.com/en/question/longest-word-in-italian