Home

Partito

Partito is an Italian word with several related uses. In political language, it denotes a political party or faction within a country’s system: un partito politico; i partiti di governo; un partito di opposizione. The term can refer to a named organization or, more broadly, to a group sharing a program or ideology. In everyday speech it is most often understood in its political sense.

Grammatically, partito is also the masculine singular past participle of partire, the verb meaning to leave

Etymology and usage notes: the political sense of partito rests on the idea of a side or

See also: partito politico, fazione, partizione.

or
depart.
In
compound
tenses
it
uses
the
auxiliary
essere
and
agrees
with
the
subject:
Il
treno
è
partito;
la
nave
è
partita;
i
treni
sono
partiti;
le
navi
sono
partite.
The
feminine
form
is
partita
and
the
plural
forms
include
partiti
(masc.)
or
partite
(fem.)
when
the
context
requires
agreement
with
the
subject.
division
within
a
larger
political
body,
contributing
to
its
sense
of
a
discrete
group
with
a
program.
The
noun
is
related,
through
historical
development,
to
Latin
roots
such
as
pars
and
partitio,
and
to
the
verb
partire
in
its
participial
form.
As
a
result,
partito
functions
as
a
stable
term
in
modern
Italian
for
organized
political
groups,
while
departing
usage
remains
tied
to
the
verb
partire.