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Chiamavo

Chiamavo is the first-person singular imperfect indicative form of the Italian verb chiamare, meaning to call or to name. In English it corresponds to I was calling or I used to call, depending on the context. The imperfect describes past actions that were ongoing, habitual, or that provided background in a narrative.

Chiamare belongs to the first conjugation (-are). Its etymology traces to Latin clamāre, to cry out or

Usage and examples. The imperfect is used to describe repeated past actions or states, or to set

Form and pronunciation. As an -are verb, the imperfect endings are -avo, -avi, -ava, -avamo, -avate, -avano;

See also. Related forms include io chiamavo, tu chiamavi, lui/lei chiamava, noi chiamavamo, voi chiamavate, loro

call,
a
development
that
gave
rise
to
the
modern
Italian
verb
meaning
both
“to
call
on
the
phone”
and
“to
name.”
the
scene
in
storytelling.
Examples:
“Ogni
giorno,
io
chiamavo
i
miei
genitori
alle
otto.”
or
“Quando
avevo
tempo,
io
chiamavo
i
miei
amici
per
parlare.”
It
contrasts
with
the
passato
prossimo,
which
would
express
a
completed
action:
“Ho
chiamato.”
The
choice
between
imperfect
and
perfect
aspects
often
depends
on
whether
the
action
is
viewed
as
ongoing/habitual
or
as
a
single
completed
event.
thus
the
form
for
the
first
person
singular
is
"chiamavo."
The
digraph
“ch”
before
i
is
pronounced
with
a
hard
k
sound,
as
in
chi-.
chiamavano,
and
the
related
verbs
chiamare
(to
call/name)
and
chiamato
(called).