Home

Nessuna

Nessuna is the feminine singular form of the Italian negative determiner and pronoun nessuno. It expresses the idea of "no" or "none" in relation to a feminine noun, and can function as a determiner before the noun (for example, nessuna idea, nessuna traccia) or as a pronoun replacing a feminine noun (for example, non c'è nessuna). It is used in negative sentences to indicate the absence of any item or person that would otherwise be present.

In Italian, nessuna agrees in gender and number with the noun it accompanies. The masculine counterparts are

Etymologically, nessuna comes from the negation ne- combined with uno, meaning "not one" or "none." It shares

nessuno
and
nessun;
nessuna
corresponds
to
feminine
singular
nouns,
while
nessuno
can
function
as
both
a
masculine
singular
determiner/pronoun
and,
in
some
contexts,
a
figure
of
speech
or
pronoun.
A
common
construction
is
"Non
c'è
nessuna
+
[feminine
noun]"
or
the
shorter
form
"Nessuna
+
[feminine
noun]"
when
the
noun
is
understood
from
context.
Examples
include
"Non
c'è
nessuna
possibilità"
and
"Nessuna
delle
due
ha
vinto."
Nessuna
is
also
used
in
questions
and
negative
replies
to
emphasize
the
absence
of
any
option
or
respondent.
its
conceptual
origin
with
nessuno,
the
masculine
form.
In
standard
Italian,
nessuna
is
a
routine
choice
whenever
the
referent
is
feminine
and
singular,
while
other
forms
such
as
nessun
and
nessuno
handle
masculine
forms
or
other
syntactic
roles.