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Visitavamo

Visitavamo is the first-person plural imperfect indicative form of the Italian verb visitare, meaning "we were visiting" or "we used to visit." It is formed by attaching the imperfect ending -avamo to the verb stem visit-.

Origin and form: Visitare is a standard Italian verb in the -are class; its infinitive derives from

Usage: The imperfect tense describes past actions that were ongoing, repeated, or habitual, or provides background

Notes: While "visitavamo" is typically written as two words with the subject as needed (e.g., "noi visitavamo"),

See also: Italian grammar, Imperfect tense, Visitare.

Latin
-āre
verbs.
For
-are
verbs,
the
imperfect
endings
are
-avo,
-avi,
-ava,
-avamo,
-avate,
-avano,
so
"noi
visitavamo"
corresponds
to
"we
were
visiting"
or
"we
used
to
visit."
The
subject
pronoun
"noi"
is
often
omitted
because
the
ending
already
marks
the
person
and
number.
information
in
a
narrative.
Examples
include:
"Noi
visitavamo
i
musei
ogni
settimana"
(We
used
to
visit
the
museums
every
week)
and
"Quando
eravamo
giovani,
visitavamo
spesso
i
paesi
vicini"
(When
we
were
young,
we
often
visited
nearby
towns).
The
form
can
appear
in
written
and
spoken
Italian
to
set
scene
or
describe
routine
past
activity.
it
is
not
used
as
a
standalone
noun.
In
non-standard
or
stylized
contexts,
it
might
appear
in
condensed
prose
or
titles,
but
its
grammatical
function
remains
a
verb
form.