pravità
Italian
editEtymology
editBorrowed from Latin prāvitātem (“viciousness ← deformity”). By surface analysis, pravo (“evil, wicked”) + -ità (“-ity, -ness”).
Pronunciation
editNoun
editpravità f (invariable) (literary)
- evilness, wickedness
- Synonyms: malvagità, perversità
- 1348, Giovanni Villani, “Libro undecimo”, in Nuova Cronica[1], published 1991, ⅬⅩⅨ Di certe leggi che fece in Roma Lodovico di Baviera sì come imperadore:
- Lodovico di Baviera, […] in presenza del popolo di Roma fece pubblicare e confermò le ’nfrascritte nuove leggi per lui nuovamente fatte, la sustanzia in brieve de le quali è questa: che qualunque Cristiano […] incontanente trovato in quello peccato dell’eretica pravità o de la lesa maestà, fosse e dovesse essere morto
- Louis of Bavaria, at the presence of the people of Rome, had the undermentioned new laws, made from scratch by himself, published and confirmed, whose essence, briefly, is this: any Christian found in the sin of heretical wickedness, or of lese majesty, was to be immediately put to death
- 1940, Riccardo Bacchelli, Mondo vecchio sempre nuovo, Mursia, published 1969, page 25:
- era sporco d'una sporcizia che serviva d'insegna alla sua pravità
- he was filthy, of a filth that served as a sign of his wickedness
- an evil or depraved deed
Related terms
editFurther reading
edit- pravità in Treccani.it – Vocabolario Treccani on line, Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana
Anagrams
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- Italian terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- Italian terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *preh₂-
- Italian terms borrowed from Latin
- Italian terms derived from Latin
- Italian terms suffixed with -ità
- Italian 3-syllable words
- Italian terms with IPA pronunciation
- Rhymes:Italian/a
- Rhymes:Italian/a/3 syllables
- Italian lemmas
- Italian nouns
- Italian indeclinable nouns
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- Italian feminine nouns
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