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Tornavano

Tornavano is the third-person plural imperfect indicative form of the Italian verb tornare, meaning to return or to come back. In narrative and descriptive contexts, tornavano expresses a past action that was ongoing or repeated, equivalent to “they were returning” or “they used to return.”

Conjugation and form. Tornare belongs to the first conjugation (-are). In the imperfect tense the endings are

Usage and nuance. The imperfect conveys habitual or continuous action in the past, or a background setting

Examples. “Quando eravamo giovani, ogni estate tornavamo al paese.” “I viaggiatori tornavano spesso al punto di

Etymology and related forms. Tornavano derives from the Italian verb tornare, itself a standard Romance-language verb

See also. Related topics include tornare and the imperfect tense (imperfetto) in Italian grammar.

-avo,
-avi,
-ava,
-avamo,
-avate,
-avano:
io
tornavo,
tu
tornavi,
lui/lei
tornava,
noi
tornavamo,
voi
tornavate,
loro
tornavano.
In
compound
tenses
the
verb
uses
the
auxiliary
essere,
for
example
in
passato
prossimo:
sono
tornati.
within
a
story.
Tornavano
is
commonly
paired
with
time
expressions
such
as
“ogni
giorno,”
“spesso,”
or
“quando
eravamo
bambini.”
It
contrasts
with
forms
like
tornano
or
tornarono,
which
signal
completed
or
punctual
past
actions
rather
than
ongoing
or
repeated
ones.
partenza
per
riposarsi.”
These
illustrate
how
tornavano
situates
a
past
pattern
or
ongoing
activity
rather
than
a
single
event.
with
Latin
origins.
Related
forms
include
the
infinitive
tornare
and
other
conjugated
tenses
such
as
tornavo,
tornavi,
tornava,
and
the
passato
prossimo
forms
like
sono
tornato/a.