Let's traslate our text:
Ho visto Valerio su Skype e mi ha detto di chiarire la situazione.
I saw Valerio by Skype and he told me to clarify the situation.
Io decido di parlare con Pietro.
I
decide to talk to Peter.
Gli chiedo spiegazioni del suo comportamento.
I ask explanations of his behavior.
Lui ride e non risponde.
He laughs
and doesn't respond.
Io insisto, non ho intenzione di smettere, gli dico quello che penso.
I insist, I am not going to stop, I tell him what I
think.
Allora lui diventa aggressivo e inizia a gridare e a insultarmi in modo pesante.
Then he becomes aggressive and starts shouting and insulting me
so rudely.
Non resto ad ascoltarlo.
I don't stay to listen him.
loro decidono - decìdono
Ok, well!
Try to create the conjugation of "chiedere, ridere, rispondere, insistere".
You could remember better, if you repeat and repeat again.
I want you look the sentence
"io decido di parlare".
You have to memorize this rule:
"when I use the verb -DECIDERE- before another verb,
I must use the preposition DI"
Then:
"incomincia a gridare"
You have to memorize this rule:
"when I use the verb -INCOMINCIARE- before another verb,
I must use the preposition A"
Then:
"resto ad ascoltare"
You have to memorize this rule:
"when I use the verb -RESTARE- before another verb,
I must use the preposition A"
You must use "AD" before verb that starts with a vowel.
Examples: "ad ascoltare, ad aspettare, ad imparare...".
Do you know the nouns with the letter "E" in the end?
Here you
find "spiegazioni" and "intenzione" (spiegazione (singular), spiegazioni (plural) - la
spiegazione, le spiegazioni, una spiegazione / intenzione, intenzioni -
l'intenzione, le intenzioni, un'intenzione). These are feminine nouns.
Do you know this rule: "every noun that finishes with "ZIONE" is feminine"?
Yes? Well!
No? Right now you could remember.
Every noun that finishes with "ZIONE" is feminine.
"Comportamento" and "modo" are masculine nouns (il comportamento, i comportamenti, il modo, i modi - un comportamento, un modo).
We shall tell and remember the differences of the Italian nouns in a next post. Don't worry! Right now remember these nouns.