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intendeva

Intendeva is the third-person singular imperfect indicative form of the Italian verb intendere, which means to intend, to mean, or to understand. The imperfect tense expresses a past action, a habitual past action, or a past state of intention or comprehension.

Etymology and senses: intendere derives from Latin intendere, formed from in- (toward) and tendere (to stretch

Grammar and usage: intendeva follows regular -ere verb conjugation patterns in the imperfect: io intendevo, tu

Nuances: intendeva emphasizes the speaker’s past aim or intended meaning rather than a concluded action. In

See also: intendere, which covers the present or other tenses; historical or literary uses of the verb

or
aim).
In
Italian,
the
primary
meanings
include
to
intend
or
to
mean,
and
to
understand
in
certain
expressions.
The
imperfect
form
intendeva
can
indicate
what
someone
was
intending
to
do
or
what
they
meant
to
convey
in
the
past,
or
it
can
reflect
a
past
ongoing
state
of
understanding.
intendevi,
lui/lei
intendeva,
noi
intendevamo,
voi
intendevate,
loro
intendevano.
In
practice,
it
is
used
in
narrative
or
reported
speech
to
describe
past
intentions
or
past
meanings.
Examples
include:
“Intendeva
chiedere
scusa”
(he
intended
to
ask
for
forgiveness)
and
“Cosa
intendeva
dire?”
(What
did
he
mean
to
say?).
It
can
also
appear
in
contexts
where
the
sense
is
closer
to
“to
understand”
or
“to
mean”
in
the
past.
modern
usage,
distinguishing
between
intendere
as
“to
mean”
and
capire
as
“to
understand”
can
help
choose
intendeva
to
express
intention
or
meaning
in
the
past.
intendere
to
mean
or
understand
in
different
narrative
contexts.