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Copiavi

Copiavi is the second-person singular imperfect indicative form of the Italian verb copiare, meaning to copy. It is used to describe an action that was ongoing, habitual, or not completed in the past, referring to "tu" (you).

Conjugation and related forms: copiare is a regular -are verb. Key imperfect forms include io copiavo, tu

Etymology and senses: copiare derives from the noun copia (in Italian meaning a copy or manuscript), which

Usage and nuances: copiavi is common in everyday language when recounting past copying actions performed by

Examples:

- Quando studiavi, copiavi gli appunti dal vicino.

- Se copiavi i dati senza autorizzazione, rischiavi una sanzione.

In summary, copiavi is a standard verb form used in Italian to describe past, imperfect copying actions

copiavi,
lui/lei
copiava,
noi
copiavamo,
voi
copiavate,
loro
copiavano.
Other
tenses
include
presente
copied,
passato
prossimo
copio/copiate?
No—il
passato
prossimo
is
ho
copiato,
hai
copiato,
ha
copiato,
abbiamo
copiato,
avete
copiato,
hanno
copiato;
the
imperfect
is
copiavi
as
noted.
The
gerund
is
copiando
and
the
past
participle
is
copiato.
itself
traces
back
to
Latin
copia.
The
verb
covers
literal
copying
of
texts
or
objects
as
well
as
figurative
copying,
such
as
imitating
styles,
reproducing
data,
or
plagiarizing.
someone
addressed
as
you.
It
can
describe
copying
notes,
code,
or
files,
and
it
may
carry
neutral,
instructional,
or
negative
connotations
depending
on
context
(for
example,
copying
text
without
attribution
in
a
school
setting).
by
the
second-person
singular,
with
broad
applicability
across
written
and
spoken
contexts.