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delloggetto

Delloggetto is not an established term in Italian or in any widely recognized field. It is most often encountered as a misspelling or misreading of the contracted Italian phrase dell’oggetto, which means “of the object.” The standard form uses an apostrophe and a space: dell’oggetto.

Etymology and usage

The phrase dell’oggetto is formed from di (of) plus l’oggetto (the object). When di combines with a

Context and interpretation

There is no widely recognized technical concept named “delloggetto.” In practice, phrases that would use dell’oggetto

See also

dell’oggetto, Italian grammar, prepositional contraction, di + l’oggetto.

singular
feminine
or
masculine
noun
beginning
with
a
vowel
that
takes
the
definite
article
l’,
the
result
is
the
elided
form
dell’oggetto.
Examples:
la
proprietà
dell’oggetto
(the
property
of
the
object),
l’influenza
dell’oggetto
sull’osservatore
(the
influence
of
the
object
on
the
observer).
The
one-word
form
delloggetto
is
considered
incorrect
in
standard
Italian,
though
it
may
appear
in
casual
writing,
OCR
errors,
or
branding
without
regard
to
orthography.
are
simply
prepositional
phrases
indicating
possession
or
relation
to
an
object.
If
a
text
uses
the
string
“delloggetto”
as
a
single
word,
it
should
be
treated
as
a
typographical
error
unless
the
writer
intentionally
adopts
it
as
a
stylized
brand
or
proper
noun,
in
which
case
it
would
require
clear
contextual
definition.