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Italian Adjectives
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Although the majority of Italian adjectives have four forms (as in italiano, italiana, italiani, italiane) there are exceptions. Not all Italian adjectives have a singular form ending in -o. There are a number of adjectives that end in -e. The singular ending -e changes to -i in the plural, whether the noun is masculine or feminine.

ENDINGS OF -E ADJECTIVES
SINGULARPLURAL
il ragazzo triste (the sad boy)i ragazzi tristi(the sad boys)
la ragazza triste (the sad girl)le ragazze tristi (the sad girls)

ITALIAN ADJECTIVES ENDING IN -E
abileable
difficiledifficult
felicehappy
fortestrong
grandebig, large, great
importanteimportant
intelligenteintelligent
interessanteinteresting
tristesad
velocefast, speedy

There are quite a few other exceptions for forming plural adjectives. For instance, adjectives that end in -io (with the stress falling on that i) form the plural with the ending -ii: addio/addii; leggio/leggii; zio/zii. The table below contains a chart of other irregular adjective endings you should know.

FORMING PLURAL ADJECTIVES
SINGULAR ENDINGPLURAL ENDING
-ca-che
-cia-ce
-cio-ci
-co-chi
-ga-ghe
-gia-ge
-gio-gi
-glia-glie
-glio-gli
-go-ghi
-scia-sce
-scio-sci

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