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Afferra

Afferra is primarily known as a form of the Italian verb afferrare, meaning to seize, grab, or grasp. In standard Italian, afferra is the third-person singular present indicative form used for he/she/it grabs, and it is also the formal second-person present tense when addressing someone as Lei (you, formal). Thus, afferra appears in sentences such as “Lui afferra la corda” (He grabs the rope) or “Lei afferra la maniglia” (You grab the handle, formal).

The full conjugation of afferrare in the present indicative is: io afferro, tu afferri, lui/lei afferra, noi

Beyond its grammatical role, afferra may occasionally appear as a proper noun in fictional works, brand names,

afferriamo,
voi
afferrate,
loro
afferrano.
The
verb
is
transitive
and
typically
takes
a
direct
object
in
the
sentence,
for
example,
afferrare
qualcosa
(to
seize
something).
The
infinitive
form
afferrare
and
related
forms
are
common
in
everyday
Italian,
in
both
spoken
and
written
usage.
or
regional
usages,
but
there
is
no
widely
recognized,
standalone
encyclopedic
entry
for
a
concept
or
entity
named
“Afferra.”
When
encountered
as
a
capitalized
term,
its
meaning
is
best
inferred
from
context,
usually
signaling
a
name
or
title
rather
than
a
common
verb
form.
See
also
afferrare
and
Italian
verb
conjugation.