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Emphasizing Stressed Pronouns

Stressed pronouns are most often placed after a preposition, as in
Vieni con me al mercato!
(
Come to the market with me!
)
But you also can use them directly after a verb without a preposition for emphasis, as in
La mamma vuole te!
(
Mom wants you!
) At this stage, to make your life simpler, use the stressed pronoun only when you have a preposition. For example,
Qualcuno ha lasciato un messaggio per te
(
Someone left a message for you
).

Table 3-2
demonstrates the forms of the stressed pronouns. As you can see, the only forms that change from the subject pronouns listed earlier in this chapter are the forms for
io
(
me
) and
tu
(
te
). Although only four prepositions are shown here, you can combine any preposition with a stressed pronoun.

Table 3-2 Stressed Pronouns

Pronouns

Translation

me
(
me
)

a/con/di/per me
(
to/with/about/for me
)

te
(
you
[singular, informal])

a
/
con
/
di
/
per te
(
to/with/about/for you
)

lui
(
him
),
lei
(
her
)

a
/
con
/
di
/
per lui/lei
(
to/with/about/for him/her/it
)

Lei
(
you
[singular, formal])

a
/
con
/
di
/
per
Lei
(
to/with/about/for you
)

noi
(
us
)

a
/
con
/
di
/
per
noi
(
to/with/about/for us
)

voi
(
you
[plural, informal])

a
/
con
/
di
/
per voi
(
to/with/about/for you
)

loro
(
them
)

a
/
con
/
di
/
per
loro
(
to/with/about/for them
)

Loro
(
you
[plural, formal])

a
/
con
/
di
/
per Loro
(
to/with/about/for you
)

Digging into Direct Object Pronouns

Whereas subject pronouns are sometimes optional, object pronouns aren't. You rely on object pronouns to replace objects or people who are recipients of that action — nice and straightforward. The following sections tell you more.

What direct object pronouns are and what they do

Here are a few key points about direct objects and direct object pronouns:

Direct objects follow transitive verbs and are called such because the action affects the object directly, as in
Vedo Angela
(
I see Angela
). If you replace
Angela
with a pronoun, the sentence becomes
La
vedo
(
I see her
).

Direct object pronouns usually answer the questions
who?
or
what?
When you can answer those questions, you can replace the answer (the direct object) with a pronoun. For example,
Leggo il giornale la domenica
(
I read the paper on Sunday
):
What do I read? The paper.
Lo leggo
(
I read it
).

Here's another example:
Ho invitato i nostri amici a cena
(
I invited our friends to dinner
). Who? Our friends.
Li ho invitati a cena
(
I invited them to dinner
).

Direct object pronouns can replace people, animals, things, and abstractions. For example,
Il ragazzo accarezza il cucciolo
(
The boy is petting the puppy
);
[Lo] L'accarezza
(
He is petting it
).
Quell'uomo ha perso la libertà
(
That man lost his freedom
);
L'ha persa
(
He lost it
).

Table 3-3
shows the direct object pronouns.

Table 3-3 Direct Object Pronouns

Singular

Plural

mi
(
me
)

ci
(
us
)

ti
(
you
[informal])

vi
(
you
[informal])

lo
(
him
)

li/le
(
them
)

la
(
her
)

Li/Le
(
you
[formal])

lo/la
(
it
)

La
(
you
[formal])

When you address someone formally in speech or writing, you use the direct object pronouns
La
(
you
[singular]) for a man or a woman,
Li
(
you
[plural]) for a group of men,
Le
for a group of women, or
Li
for a group of men and women:

Signore/Signora, La ringrazio di essere venuto/a.
(
Sir/Madam, thank you for coming.
)

Signori/Signore e Signori, Li ringrazio di essere venuti/e.
(
Gentlemen/Ladies and Gentlemen, thank you for coming.
)

Signore, Le ringrazio di essere venute.
(
Ladies, thank you for coming.
)

In everyday life, the
voi
(
you
[plural]) form is much more commonly used (formally or informally), which simplifies things considerably. For example,
Signore e Signori, Vi ringrazio di essere venuti
(
Ladies and Gentlemen, thank you for coming
).

Where to place direct object pronouns

Placement of the direct object pronoun varies according to the verb form:

The direct object pronoun often precedes the conjugated verb:
Quel ragazzo non dice mai la verità
(
That boy doesn't ever tell the truth
);
Non la dice mai
(
He never tells it
)
.

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