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mangiavamo

Mangiavamo is the first-person plural imperfect indicative form of the Italian verb mangiare, meaning to eat. It translates to “we were eating” or “we used to eat,” depending on the context. The imperfect mood is used to describe ongoing actions in the past, habitual actions, or background settings in narratives.

Formation and conjugation: The form is created by taking the stem mangi- from the infinitive mangiare and

Usage and nuances: Mangiavamo is commonly employed in storytelling or descriptive passages to set past scenes,

Examples:

- Mangiavamo insieme ogni domenica. (We used to eat together every Sunday.)

- Da piccoli, mangiavamo la stessa zuppa ogni giorno di festa. (As children, we ate the same soup

Notes: The imperfect form is standard in Italian and is used across dialects in its core function

adding
the
imperfect
ending
-avamo,
yielding
mangiavamo.
This
follows
the
standard
pattern
for
-are
verbs
in
the
imperfect.
Other
persons
use
analogous
endings:
mangiavo,
mangiavi,
mangiava,
mangiavamo,
mangiavate,
mangiavano.
indicate
routine
behavior
in
the
past,
or
describe
a
continuous
past
action.
It
contrasts
with
the
passato
prossimo,
which
marks
completed
events.
In
equally
neutral
prose,
it
helps
convey
duration
and
habit
without
focusing
on
a
definite
endpoint.
on
every
holiday.)
of
signaling
past
ongoing
or
habitual
actions.
It
is
not
interchangeable
with
the
present
or
perfect
tenses
without
altering
meaning.
See
also
mangiare
and
the
broader
Italian
imperfect
tense.