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โ“๐Ÿ‘‰๐Ÿ„๐Ÿ“…

How to Say โ€˜Do you have any mushrooms today?โ€™ in Italian

Avete dei funghi oggi?

ah-VEH-teh day-ee FOON-ghee OD-jee

[ah-VEH-teh day-ee FOON-ghee OD-jee]

๐Ÿ’ฌ Usage Tip: A very natural market question. Word-for-word: 'Do you have some mushrooms today?'

๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡น In Italy: Fresh availability changes often, so today is exactly the kind of word Italians use when shopping for produce.

Phrase Breakdown

Avete

[ah-VEH-teh]

do you have

Used to ask politely if the seller has something in stock.

Example

Avete dei funghi oggi o arrivano domani?

Do you have mushrooms today or do they arrive tomorrow?

Dei funghi

day-ee FOON-ghee

Some mushrooms

dei is the masculine plural partitive article meaning 'some'; funghi means mushrooms.

Example

Vorrei dei funghi freschi.

I would like some fresh mushrooms.

Words in this phrase

dei

[day-ee]

some / any

Partitive article here meaning some or any before a plural masculine noun.

Example

Cerco dei funghi di stagione.

Iโ€™m looking for some seasonal mushrooms.

funghi

[FOON-ghee]

mushrooms

General plural word for mushrooms, often used when asking what kinds are available.

Example

I funghi oggi sono locali.

The mushrooms today are local.

oggi

[OD-jee]

today

Specifies that you are asking about current availability today.

Example

Oggi il mercato ha pochi funghi.

Today the market has few mushrooms.

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What Learners Are Saying

โ€œSpent the summer in Tuscany researching Italian cuisine. Being able to chat with nonnas at the market about recipes? Absolutely priceless.โ€

Grace P., 34, Food Writer

โ€œWorking on a project in Milan and needed professional Italian fast. The business scenarios gave me the confidence to present to clients within a month.โ€

Daniel F., 45, Architect

โ€œLearning a language has never been as immediately impactful. Now I can charm the locals and navigate the food scene like a boss.โ€

Alex M., 42, Software Engineer