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caricata

Caricata is the feminine singular past participle of the Italian verb caricare, meaning to load or to charge. It functions as an adjective and in compound tenses, agreeing with the gender and number of the noun it modifies. For example, una batteria caricata (a charged battery) or la foto caricata (the uploaded photo). In passive constructions it is used with the auxiliary essere, as in La batteria è stata caricata (the battery has been charged).

In contemporary Italian usage, caricata commonly describes things that have been loaded or uploaded. In computing

Caricata is primarily a grammatical form within Italian; it is not widely used as a standalone lexical

and
digital
contexts
it
can
describe
a
resource
that
has
been
loaded
or
an
action
that
has
been
completed,
for
instance
la
pagina
caricata
(the
loaded
page)
or
le
immagini
caricate
(the
uploaded
images).
The
past
participle
also
appears
in
perfect
tenses
with
avere,
such
as
ho
caricato
i
dati
(I
have
loaded
the
data),
and
in
passive
forms
with
essere,
such
as
i
dati
sono
stati
caricati.
entry
in
English-language
references.
If
encountered
as
a
proper
noun
or
title,
its
meaning
would
depend
on
the
specific
context
in
which
it
appears
and
is
not
indicated
by
the
word
itself.
In
general,
the
term
reflects
the
broader
verb
sense
of
charging
or
loading
and
its
agreement
with
feminine
nouns
in
Italian
grammar.