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reciti

Reciti is the second-person singular present indicative form of the Italian verb recitare, meaning to recite or to perform aloud. It is used when addressing someone directly with the action of reciting.

Recitare is a regular -are verb. In the present indicative its standard forms are: io recito, tu

Usage examples include a direct statement like "Tu reciti una poesia" (You recite a poem) and a

Relation to related terms: recitare broadly covers reciting, performing lines in a play, or delivering a text

reciti,
lui/lei
recita,
noi
recitiamo,
voi
recitate,
loro
recitano.
The
same
verb
also
appears
in
the
present
subjunctive,
where
forms
include
che
io
reciti,
che
tu
reciti,
che
lui
reciti,
che
noi
recitiamo,
che
voi
recitiate,
che
loro
recitino.
The
form
reciti
thus
appears
both
as
a
direct
statement
of
what
you
recite
and
as
part
of
subjunctive
clauses
such
as
"Spero
che
tu
reciti
bene"
(I
hope
that
you
recite
well).
subordinate
clause
in
a
wish
or
doubt,
for
instance
"È
importante
che
tu
reciti
domani"
(It
is
important
that
you
recite
tomorrow).
In
everyday
Italian,
the
explicit
subject
pronoun
is
often
omitted,
with
verb
endings
signaling
the
person
and
number.
aloud.
The
form
reciti
is
one
of
several
inflected
forms
that
allow
Italian
verbs
to
express
person,
number,
mood,
and
tense
within
a
sentence.