Post by account_disabled on Dec 20, 2023 6:36:11 GMT
They are called accidents of the verb... its variations according to the number... according to the number and the person... And then, throwing down the wood and stacking it: - according to the time... according to the time to which the action refers... And returning towards the cart to take another stroke: – according to the way in which the action is stated. Edmondo De Amicis – Heart (1896) November – My partner Coretti – 13, Sunday Reading this passage from the book Cuore I was intrigued by the accidents of the verb , which I had never heard of. Searching for information online I found very little, so I think it is no longer common to call them this way.
Edmondo De Amicis gives us the answer, Special Data because he makes the child, who reviews the lesson while working, say that the accidents are the variations of the verb , therefore the modifications it undergoes according to the number, the person, the tense and the mood. In the book Theory of regular, anomalous, defective and ill-known Italian verbs by Giuseppe Compagnoni (1830) in chapter 12 of Part One, Classification of words expressing the various accidents of verbs , we find it written: In the same way, therefore, the words constituting our language are divided into four classes, and therefore those which express all the accidents of the verbs: this happens for the indications of common, poetic, antiquated and erroneous.
The author then identifies four groups or classes of variations: the common ones are classes that come from the conjugation of the verb and are therefore in common use; poetics are those that present changes in ending or construction and can therefore become softer, harder, fluid, short, long ; the antiquated ones are so called because they were used by the first writers and therefore appear rough, harsh; finally, the erroneous ones are those that are against the rules. They are also called idioms by some , because they are used by idiotic people, and by others uncertain , because they are found in old writings.
Edmondo De Amicis gives us the answer, Special Data because he makes the child, who reviews the lesson while working, say that the accidents are the variations of the verb , therefore the modifications it undergoes according to the number, the person, the tense and the mood. In the book Theory of regular, anomalous, defective and ill-known Italian verbs by Giuseppe Compagnoni (1830) in chapter 12 of Part One, Classification of words expressing the various accidents of verbs , we find it written: In the same way, therefore, the words constituting our language are divided into four classes, and therefore those which express all the accidents of the verbs: this happens for the indications of common, poetic, antiquated and erroneous.
The author then identifies four groups or classes of variations: the common ones are classes that come from the conjugation of the verb and are therefore in common use; poetics are those that present changes in ending or construction and can therefore become softer, harder, fluid, short, long ; the antiquated ones are so called because they were used by the first writers and therefore appear rough, harsh; finally, the erroneous ones are those that are against the rules. They are also called idioms by some , because they are used by idiotic people, and by others uncertain , because they are found in old writings.