Diana
lui = esso = egli - please explain when to use each one Please help clear up some confusion. I understand that lui = "he" as a subject pronoun and as an object of the preposition, but "Mosalingua" - the app - is including esso and egli as well. I have not been using them thus far. When would I use "esso" or "egli" - I understand for masculine singular, but is there a reason I would use "esso" instead of lui? Or "egli" instead of lui. Are they outdated or something? Please explain in simple terms, Thanks so much! Do I need to worry about using "esso" and "egli" at all? I prefer to use "lui" for people and things. Can I do that?
٢٠ أغسطس ٢٠١٧ ١٣:٠٩
الإجابات · 4
1
Forget "egli" (for human beings) and "esso" (for things). They are outdated and - for sure - you'll never listen to Italians saying "egli" or "esso". You can find "egli" in novels or essays, but I guess you want to learn Italian in its practical usage. Anyway, you can't say "lui" if you want to refer to things. You can imply them or use pronouns like "lo" "la" (as object pronouns) or say the terms again.
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Thanks.
٢٠ أغسطس ٢٠١٧
I would like to point out that you shouldn't be worried about egli/ella: they're almost never not used in the spoken language (you can find them in books though) and they're used as subject pronouns to refer to a person exclusively. But, as for esso/essa/essi/esse, you can hear them sometimes and certainly you can find them in the written language. They are used to refer to a name of an animal or a thing or even a person that has been previously mentioned. They're particularly useful when referring to things. For instance, I remember a few years ago a well known Italian politician plastered the city with posters for his campaign and on one of them he wrote: "difendiamo l'ambiente: da LUI dipende il nostro futuro" and everybody made fun of him because he should have used ESSO instead.
٢٠ أغسطس ٢٠١٧
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