Home

tornate

Tornate is a term that may refer to multiple uses but does not denote a single, widely recognized concept in English. In Italian, tornate is a verb form rather than a standalone noun. It is the second-person plural present indicative form of the verb tornare (you all return) and also the plural imperative form used to issue a command (return, you all). This form appears in sentences such as "Voi tornate domani" or as a direct command in contexts where the subject is the plural “you.”

In English-language contexts, tornate is not a common lexical item and is usually encountered as a misspelling

Because tornate can function differently depending on the context, readers should rely on surrounding text to

or
variant
of
ornate,
which
means
elaborately
decorated.
It
can
also
appear
as
a
proper
noun
in
limited
contexts,
such
as
a
surname
or
a
fictional
place
name,
but
there
is
no
widely
documented
geographic,
historical,
or
cultural
feature
by
that
name.
determine
meaning.
If
capitalized,
it
may
indicate
a
proper
noun;
if
it
appears
in
Italian,
it
most
likely
reflects
a
verb
form;
if
the
spelling
appears
in
English
prose,
it
is
often
an
erroneous
variant
of
ornate.