Home

Possono

Possono is the third-person plural present indicative form of the Italian verb potere, meaning "they can" or "they are able to." It functions as a modal verb used to express ability, possibility, or permission in the present. In Italian, potere is typically followed by an infinitive, so phrases like possono venire domani mean "they can come tomorrow." The negative form is non possono, as in Non possono entrare senza un biglietto.

Etymology and forms: potere derives from Latin posse, and sono is the present tense ending for the

Usage notes: pos­souno is used in a variety of contexts to indicate capability, possibility, or permission in

Related forms include the other present-tense persons of potere and the related modal expressions using potere

third-person
plural
in
this
verb
class.
The
standard
present-tense
conjugation
is
posso,
puoi,
può,
possiamo,
potete,
possono,
with
possono
occupying
the
third-person
plural.
As
a
modal
verb,
potere
modulates
the
meaning
of
the
accompanying
infinitive
rather
than
carrying
full
lexical
meaning
on
its
own.
the
present.
It
can
express
straightforward
ability,
hypothetical
capability,
or
permission
granted
or
requested,
depending
on
context
and
intonation.
It
commonly
appears
in
everyday
speech,
formal
writing,
and
reported
speech.
Examples
include
Possono
venire
se
hanno
tempo
(They
can
come
if
they
have
time)
and
Non
possono
entrare
senza
un
biglietto
(They
cannot
enter
without
a
ticket).
in
different
tenses,
moods,
or
voices.
As
with
other
Italian
modals,
the
exact
nuance
depends
on
context,
syntax,
and
any
accompanying
verbs.