Voted Best Answer
Feb 10, 2015 - 04:30 PM
Buono is the singular, masculine word for good. When placed before a masculine noun the final "o" is dropped. When placed after, the final "o" is included.
This is discussed at some point in level 2.
Lui è un buon fratello.
Lui è un fratello buono.
Lì and là both mean "there." The difference is purely regional. You'll hear them both used so you need to be aware of them both. The same is true of
qui and qua - both mean "here."
To type an accented vowel on a Mac you can simply hold down the letter key until a pop-up window appears. (this trick only works in Safari) or open the character viewer. (it's in system preferences→language and text→input sources tab.)
Windows also has a character set file but I can't remember how to find it.
This is discussed at some point in level 2.
Lui è un buon fratello.
Lui è un fratello buono.
Lì and là both mean "there." The difference is purely regional. You'll hear them both used so you need to be aware of them both. The same is true of
qui and qua - both mean "here."
To type an accented vowel on a Mac you can simply hold down the letter key until a pop-up window appears. (this trick only works in Safari) or open the character viewer. (it's in system preferences→language and text→input sources tab.)
Windows also has a character set file but I can't remember how to find it.