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tentiamo

Tentiamo is the first-person plural present indicative form of the Italian verb tentare, meaning to try, attempt, or tempt. In everyday use, it expresses an ongoing effort by the speaker and others, and can function as a proposal or invitation in the sense of “let’s try.” The verb can also carry the sense of tempting someone or testing something, depending on context.

Etymology and morphology: tentare derives from Latin tentāre, with the same broad sense of trying or testing.

Usage and constructions: the common construction is tentare di + infinito to express attempting to do something,

Examples:

- Noi tentiamo di risolvere il problema entro stasera. (We are trying to solve the problem by tonight.)

- Lui ha tentato di convincerla. (He tried to convince her.)

- Non tentare la fortuna. (Don’t tempt fate.)

- Tentiamo di fare del nostro meglio. (Let’s try to do our best.)

Notes: tentare generally conveys a sense of effort or risk that is not always present with synonyms

In
Italian,
tentare
is
a
regular
-are
verb;
present
tense
forms
include
io
tento,
tu
tenti,
lui
tenta,
noi
tentiamo,
voi
tentate,
loro
tentano.
The
participle
is
tentato,
and
compound
tenses
use
avere
(ho
tentato,
avevo
tentato).
for
example,
tentare
di
finire
entro
la
giornata.
It
can
also
appear
transitively
with
a
direct
object,
as
in
tentare
qualcuno
(to
tempt
someone)
or
in
the
idiom
tentare
la
fortuna,
meaning
“to
tempt
fate”
or
“to
try
one’s
luck.”
like
provare,
which
is
more
broadly
used
for
“to
try”
in
everyday
speech.
The
meaning
of
tentare
can
shift
with
context,
from
a
straightforward
attempt
to
a
more
provocative
or
testing
sense
when
paired
with
nouns
like
la
fortuna.