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soddisf

Soddisf is a linguistic term used to denote the stem of the Italian verb soddisfare. It is not a standalone word in ordinary speech, but a base form used in morphological analysis to describe how the verb is inflected. The root arises from the Latin satisfacere, and the modern Italian form soddisfare preserves the underlying stem soddisf- across inflection.

In Italian, the stem soddisf- appears across conjugations and related derivatives. Present-tense forms illustrate the pattern:

Etymology and development: soddisfare comes from Latin satisfacere, meaning to do enough or to satisfy. The

In use, soddisf- functions as a theoretical stem rather than an independent lexeme. It helps describe how

See also: soddisfare, soddisfazione, soddisfacente.

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io
soddisfo,
tu
soddisfi,
lui/lei
soddisfa,
noi
soddisfiamo,
voi
soddisfacete,
loro
soddisfano.
The
past
participle
is
soddisfatto,
and
related
nouns
and
adjectives
are
formed
from
the
same
root,
for
example
soddisfazione
(satisfaction)
and
soddisfacente
(satisfactory).
modern
Italian
verb
retains
the
root
soddisf-
as
the
core
component
to
which
inflectional
endings
are
attached.
soddisfare
and
its
derivatives
are
built,
and
it
appears
in
linguistic
grammars,
dictionaries,
and
language-learning
resources
as
the
shared
base
for
related
forms.