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descritti

Descritti is the Italian past participle of the verb descrivere, and it also functions as an adjective meaning “described.” As a participle, it appears in compound tenses with the auxiliary avere (ho descritto, hai descritto, ha descritto). In passive or passive-like constructions formed with essere, it agrees in gender and number with the subject: i dettagli descritti, le informazioni descritte, sono stati descritti.

The participle has four agreement forms: descritto (masc. sing.), descritta (fem. sing.), descritti (masc. pl.), and

Etymology traces descritti to Latin dēscribere, from de- + scrībere, meaning “to write down” or “to describe.”

Usage notes: as an adjective, descritti modifies a noun and agrees in gender and number (e.g., soggetti

In summary, descritti is a versatile form linked to describing actions and attributes, functioning both as

descritte
(fem.
pl.).
The
spelling
preserves
the
root
descritt-
from
the
verb
descrivere,
with
the
usual
-o/-a/-i/-e
endings
corresponding
to
gender
and
number.
The
Italian
term
retains
the
sense
of
rendering
something
in
description
or
account,
rather
than
performing
the
act
in
the
moment.
descritti,
dettagli
descritti).
As
a
participle,
it
combines
with
auxiliary
avere
to
form
perfect
tenses
(Ho
descritto,
Hanno
descritto).
In
some
contexts,
especially
legal
or
technical
writing,
the
form
i
descritti
can
function
as
a
shorthand
noun
phrase
meaning
“the
described
(persons
or
items).”
a
verb
participle
and
as
an
agreeing
adjective
in
Italian.