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Segnamo

Segnamo is the first-person plural present indicative form of the Italian verb segnare, meaning we mark, we note, or we sign, depending on context. It is commonly used to indicate the act of marking, recording, or designating something in everyday language and formal writing.

Etymology and meaning: Segnare comes from Latin signum, meaning a sign or mark, through the evolution of

Forms and usage: The infinitive is segnare, the gerund segnando, and the past participle segnato. Present indicative

Applications: In everyday Italian, segnare covers marking a calendar, noting important details in a document, or

Related terms: Annotare (to annotate), Registrare (to record), Segnalare (to signal or report), and Firmare (to

See also: Italian grammar and verb conjugation references, lists of segnare forms, and usage guides for note-taking

Old
Italian.
The
term
retains
the
core
sense
of
making
a
sign
or
leaving
a
mark,
which
broadens
to
note-taking,
recording
data,
or
designating
items.
conjugation
for
key
forms
is:
io
segno,
tu
segnI,
lui/lei
segna,
noi
segnamo,
voi
segnate,
loro
segnano.
Imperatives
include
segna
(singular)
and
segnate
(plural).
Segnamo
is
used
when
the
subject
performing
the
action
is
“we,”
as
in
group
activities
like
keeping
records,
marking
positions,
or
highlighting
items.
logging
information
in
a
database.
In
mapping
or
navigation,
it
can
mean
marking
a
location;
in
archival
work,
recording
data.
The
verb
often
implies
deliberate,
traceable
action
rather
than
a
casual
gesture.
sign
a
document),
each
with
distinct
nuance.
and
data
recording.