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Vengono

Vengono is an Italian verb form. It is the third-person plural present indicative of venire, meaning they come or they are coming. Venire means to come, to arrive, to originate from, or to attend. Vengono is used when the subject of the sentence is plural.

In usage, vengon o describes actions of multiple subjects arriving or appearing toward the speaker or a

Etymology and form notes: veng o ne derives from the Latin venire. The present tense shows a

Related conjugations of venire include io vengo, tu vieni, lui viene, noi veniamo, voi venite. Vengono is

location.
It
can
express
origin
with
da
or
dall’
plus
a
place:
for
example,
Loro
vengono
da
Roma
(They
come
from
Rome).
It
can
also
denote
regular
attendance
or
arrival
at
events:
Vengono
qui
ogni
sera
(They
come
here
every
evening)
or
Vengono
al
concerto
stasera?
(Are
they
coming
to
the
concert
tonight?)
stem
ven-
with
a
-g-
before
the
ending,
producing
vento-like
pronunciation
in
standard
Italian.
Pronunciation
is
typically
rendered
as
ven-GO-neh,
with
the
stress
on
the
first
syllable:
[ˈven.ɡo.ne].
distinct
from
venono,
which
is
not
standard
Italian.
The
form
is
commonly
encountered
in
everyday
speech,
journalism,
literature,
and
many
constructions
that
describe
movement,
origin,
or
attendance.