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sopprimono

Sopprrmanno? Actually, sopprimono is the third-person plural present indicative form of the Italian verb sopprimere. It means to suppress, eliminate, or abolish something that is considered unnecessary, harmful, or undesirable. The sense can be physical or abstract, including laws, institutions, rights, measures, or processes.

Etymology: the verb derives from Latin subprimere or suppremere, meaning to press down or force under, and

Usage: sopprimono is common in political, legal, administrative, and journalistic contexts. Examples: "Il governo sopprime una

Grammatical note: sopprimono is used with the subject loro (they). Other present-tense forms include sopprimo, sopprimi,

arrived
in
Italian
through
the
development
of
the
verb
sopprimere.
The
form
sopprimono
is
the
third-person
plural
of
the
present
tense.
tassa"
(the
government
abolishes
a
tax);
"Le
norme
sopprimono
alcuni
requisiti"
(the
rules
remove
certain
requirements);
"I
registri
sono
stati
soppressi"
(the
registers
have
been
abolished).
In
legal
language,
it
often
denotes
abolition
or
repeal
of
laws
or
agencies;
in
administrative
contexts,
it
can
indicate
the
removal
of
procedures,
programs,
or
personnel.
sopprime,
sopprimiamo,
sopprimete.
The
past
participle
is
soppresso,
used
with
avere
or
essere
depending
on
construction,
as
in
"hanno
soppresso"
or
"la
legge
è
stata
soppressa."
The
verb
is
regularly
conjugated
like
other
-ere
verbs
in
the
present
tense,
with
the
usual
variations
across
tenses
and
moods.