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Camminavate

Camminavate is the second-person plural imperfect indicative form of the Italian verb camminare. It translates to “you all were walking” or “you all used to walk.” It is a regular form in the imperfect tense for -are verbs.

Formation follows the standard imperfect endings for -are verbs: -avo, -avi, -ava, -avamo, -avate, -avano. Therefore

Usage: camminavate describes actions in the past that were ongoing, habitual, or part of a background in

Relation to other tenses: camminavate contrasts with camminate (present tense) meaning “you all walk,” and with

camminare
yields
camminavo,
camminavi,
camminava,
camminavamo,
camminavate,
camminavano.
The
form
camminavate
corresponds
to
the
stem
cammin-
plus
the
ending
-avate.
a
narrative.
It
is
commonly
used
with
time
expressions
or
in
description
to
set
the
scene,
rather
than
to
denote
a
completed
action.
For
example:
Da
giovani,
camminavate
molto
per
andare
a
scuola.
Durante
l’inverno,
camminavate
spesso
per
tenervi
in
forma.
In
narrative
or
reported
speech,
it
conveys
a
sense
of
repetition
or
continuity
in
the
past.
other
past
tenses
that
indicate
completed
actions,
such
as
the
passato
prossimo
or
passato
remoto
in
contexts
where
those
tenses
are
standard.
As
a
common
and
regular
imperfect
form,
camminavate
is
widely
used
in
everyday
Italian
to
describe
past
routines
or
scenes.