Time to talk about the past. Italian has two main past tenses, and the one from this lesson, Passato Prossimo, is the workhorse: Italians use it for anything that happened and finished. I ate, I went, I bought, we saw. It’s built from two words, just like the English “I have eaten”.

How to build it

Passato Prossimo = AVERE or ESSERE in the present tense + the past participle of the main verb.

The past participle is easy to form:

-ARE verbs: -ATO (parlare – parlato, mangiare – mangiato)

-ERE verbs: -UTO (ricevere – ricevuto, vendere – venduto)

-IRE verbs: -ITO (dormire – dormito, finire – finito)

Ho mangiato una pizza – I ate a pizza

Hai dormito bene? – Did you sleep well?

Abbiamo parlato con il direttore – We spoke with the director

Which helper: AVERE or ESSERE?

Most verbs take AVERE. A smaller group takes ESSERE, mostly verbs of movement and change: andare (to go), venire (to come), arrivare (to arrive), partire (to leave), tornare (to return), uscire (to go out), entrare (to enter), nascere (to be born), morire (to die), stare, essere itself, and all reflexive verbs (we will meet them in a later lesson).

With ESSERE there is one extra rule: the participle agrees with the subject like an adjective, changing -o / -a / -i / -e:

Marco è andato a Roma – Marco went to Rome

Anna è andata a Roma – Anna went to Rome

I ragazzi sono andati al mare – The boys went to the seaside

Le ragazze sono andate al mare – The girls went to the seaside

With AVERE the participle doesn’t change: Marco ha mangiato, Anna ha mangiato.

Irregular participles

Of course, the most common verbs have irregular participles. Here are the ones you can’t live without:

fare – to do fatto
dire – to say detto
leggere – to read letto
scrivere – to write scritto
vedere – to see visto
prendere – to take preso
mettere – to put messo
aprire – to open aperto
chiudere – to close chiuso
bere – to drink bevuto
essere / stare – to be stato
nascere – to be born nato
venire – to come venuto
morire – to die morto

Yes, ESSERE and STARE share the participle “stato”. “Sono stato a Parigi” means “I have been to Paris”.

Negation and questions

Nothing new here. NON goes before the whole construction, questions work by intonation:

Non ho capito – I didn’t understand

Non siamo usciti ieri – We didn’t go out yesterday

Hai visto Marco? – Have you seen Marco?

Examples

Ieri ho lavorato tutto il giorno – Yesterday I worked all day

Che cosa hai fatto ieri sera? – What did you do last night?

Ho letto un libro e ho scritto due mail – I read a book and wrote two emails

Anna è nata a Palermo – Anna was born in Palermo

Siamo tornati a casa a mezzanotte – We came back home at midnight

Chi ha aperto la finestra? – Who opened the window?

Non hanno detto niente – They didn’t say anything

Il film è stato bellissimo – The movie was wonderful

Ho preso il treno per Roma – I took the train to Rome

Sei mai stato in Italia? – Have you ever been to Italy?

Vocabulary

ieri – yesterday

ieri sera – last night

capire – to understand

finire – to finish

ricevere – to receive

vendere – to sell

vedere – to see

mettere – to put

nascere – to be born

morire – to die

entrare – to enter

mai – never, ever

niente – nothing

tutto – all, everything

Exercises

Put the verb into Passato Prossimo. Careful with the choice of AVERE or ESSERE!

  1. Io ______________ una lettera (SCRIVERE) – I wrote a letter
  2. Tu ______________ il film? (VEDERE) – Did you see the movie?
  3. Maria ______________ a Roma in treno (ANDARE) – Maria went to Rome by train
  4. Noi ______________ la porta (CHIUDERE) – We closed the door
  5. I miei genitori ______________ ieri (ARRIVARE) – My parents arrived yesterday
  6. Voi ______________ bene? (DORMIRE) – Did you sleep well?
  7. Lei ______________ un caffè (PRENDERE) – She had (took) a coffee
  8. Le ragazze ______________ alle sei (USCIRE) – The girls went out at six
  9. Io non ______________ niente (DIRE) – I didn’t say anything
  10. Dante ______________ nel 1265 (NASCERE) – Dante was born in 1265
  11. Noi ______________ tre giorni a Venezia (STARE) – We stayed three days in Venice
  12. Chi ______________ il mio gelato? (MANGIARE) – Who ate my ice cream?

Answers:

1: ho scritto; 2: hai visto; 3: è andata; 4: abbiamo chiuso; 5: sono arrivati; 6: avete dormito; 7: ha preso; 8: sono uscite; 9: ho detto; 10: è nato; 11: siamo stati; 12: ha mangiato