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investito

Investito is the Italian past participle of the verb investire. It functions as an adjective or, in some contexts, as a noun. The meaning changes with usage, and the term appears in both financial and accident-related phrases.

In financial and resource terms, investito describes something that has received investment of money or resources.

In everyday language and journalism, investire commonly means to run over or knock down a person or

Grammar note: when investire is used transitively with avere (to invest money), the past participle investito

Usage considerations: the intended meaning usually determines interpretation. In written Italian, context will clarify whether investito

It
can
modify
nouns
such
as
capitale
investito
(invested
capital)
or
risorse
investite.
The
related
noun
is
investimento,
meaning
investment.
In
compound
tenses
with
avere,
the
participle
remains
invariable:
ho
investito
denaro.
animal
with
a
vehicle.
In
this
sense,
investito
denotes
the
victim
or
the
injured
party:
un
pedone
investito
da
un’auto,
gli
investiti
in
un
incidente
stradale.
The
plural
investiti
refers
to
multiple
individuals
harmed
in
such
an
incident.
does
not
agree
with
the
object:
ho
investito
una
somma.
In
the
passive
or
semi-passive
sense
(to
be
run
over,
as
a
consequence
of
an
accident),
the
construction
uses
essere,
and
the
participle
agrees
in
gender
and
number:
il
pedone
è
stato
investito.
refers
to
financial
investment
or
to
a
person
injured
after
a
road
incident.