Italian

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From Latin (not)ipse (emphatic, literally himself)ūnus (one), meaning “not even one”. Cognate with Neapolitan nisciuno, Sardinian nisciunu, Friulian nissun, Ligurian nisciǜn, and Old French neisune. Compare Spanish ninguno and Romanian niciun.

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /nesˈsu.no/
  • Audio:(file)
  • Rhymes: -uno
  • Hyphenation: nes‧sù‧no

Determiner

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nessuno (feminine nessuna, no plural, superlative nessunissimo)

  1. (in negative sentences) no, any
    Synonyms: (informal) niente, (archaic, literary) nullo, (archaic, literary) veruno, (archaic, literary) niuno

Pronoun

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nessuno m sg (singular only, feminine nessuna)

  1. none
  2. (masculine only) no one, nobody

Usage notes

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  • The determiner has no plural form and is therefore only used with singular nouns. The pronoun is also a singulare tantum.
  • Before any grammatically connected word not beginning with s consonant, cn, gn, pn, ps, x, or z, the masculine form nessuno changes into the apocopic form nessun, while the feminine form nessuna becomes nessun' before vowels:
nessun doloreno pain
nessun amicono friends
nessun'amicano (female) friends
nessun altronobody else

Synonyms

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