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Giocavo

Giocavo is the first-person singular imperfect indicative form of the Italian verb giocare, meaning to play. The imperfect tense in Italian is used to describe ongoing or habitual actions in the past, to set background scenes, or to indicate states of being in the past. Giocavo, together with the other imperfect forms (giocavi, giocava, giocavamo, giocavate, giocavano), is commonly used in narration and everyday speech to refer to past activities that were regular or in progress.

Etymology and classification: The verb giocare derives from the Latin iocāre, related to iocus (joke). It belongs

Usage notes: Giocavo is frequently used with time cues such as quando ero bambino (when I was

Examples:

- Quando ero bambino, giocavo spesso nel parco con i miei amici.

- Mentre la mamma cucinava, io giocavo a carte con mio fratello.

See also: giocare; conjugation of Italian -are verbs; imperfect tense in Italian.

to
the
regular
-are
conjugation
class
in
Italian.
The
imperfect
forms
follow
the
standard
endings
for
-are
verbs
in
the
passato
remoto
and
other
past
tenses,
reflecting
the
broader
Romance
verb
conjugation
patterns.
a
child),
spesso
(often),
or
da
giovane
(in
my
youth)
to
describe
past
routines
or
scenes.
It
contrasts
with
passato
prossimo,
which
is
used
for
completed
past
actions.
In
spoken
Italian,
the
subject
pronoun
io
is
often
dropped
and
conveyed
through
the
verb
ending.