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quotidiane

Quotidiane is the feminine plural form of the Italian adjective quotidiano, meaning "daily" or "everyday." It describes things that occur each day, are part of daily life, or are ordinary and routine. The corresponding forms are quotidiano (masc. sing), quotidiana (fem. sing), quotidiani (masc. pl), and quotidiane (fem. pl). As an attributive or predicative adjective, quotidiane agrees with feminine plural nouns, as in cose quotidiane or abitudini quotidiane.

Etymology and usage notes: Quotidiane derives from the Latin quotidianus, itself from quotidie meaning "every day."

Related terms and distinctions: Quotidiane is primarily an adjective; it is rarely used as a standalone noun.

Examples:

- Le attività quotidiane richiedono organizzazione.

- Cose quotidiane, come vestiti e cibo, sono necessarie.

- Cronaca quotidiana racconta gli eventi del giorno.

Quotidiane thus signals everydayness or normalcy in feminine plural contexts, and it forms part of a broader

In
Italian,
it
is
commonly
used
to
convey
both
temporal
meaning
(daily)
and
qualitative
meaning
(ordinary,
commonplace).
It
appears
in
phrases
that
emphasize
regularity,
such
as
routine
quotidiana,
attività
quotidiane,
and
oggetti
quotidiani,
the
latter
being
masculine
because
it
modifies
a
masculine
plural
noun.
The
related
noun
quotidianità
refers
to
the
realm
or
quality
of
daily
life.
The
word
quotidiano
can
also
function
as
a
noun
meaning
"a
daily
newspaper"
(il
quotidiano).
Distinguishing
usage
examples
helps
avoid
confusion
between
daily
life
concepts
and
media
references.
family
of
terms
denoting
daily
life
and
routine
in
Italian.