Italian edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

Learned borrowing from Latin statiōnem. Doublet of stagione, stazzo, stazzone, and stazio, of which the first three were inherited from Latin, while the last was borrowed.

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /statˈt͡sjo.ne/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -one
  • Hyphenation: sta‧zió‧ne

Noun edit

stazione f or (archaic) m (plural stazioni)

  1. position, posture
  2. a stopping place
    • 1840, Alessandro Manzoni, “Capitolo XXX [Chapter 30]”, in I promessi sposi[1], Tip. Guglielmini e Redaelli, page 577:
      Si disputava quali fossero i reggimenti più indiavolati, se fosse peggio la fanteria o la cavalleria; si ripetevano, il meglio che si poteva, certi nomi di condottieri; d’alcuni si raccontavan l’imprese passate, si specificavano le stazioni e le marce
      There were arguments about which regiments were the wildest; about whichever was worse between infantry and cavalry; some repeated, as best as they could, some names of leaders; the past endeavours/endeavors of some of those were being told, their stops and marches were being specified
    1. stopping, halting (of vehicles)
      Synonyms: arresto, fermata
    2. (Christianity) station (any of the Stations of the Cross)
    3. (astronomy) station (apparent standing still of a superior planet)
  3. station (stopping place for ground transportation)
    stazione ferroviariarailway station
    • 1904, Luigi Pirandello, “7. Cambio treno”, in Il fu Mattia Pascal [The Late Mattia Pascal]‎[2], published 1919, page 88:
      Alla prima stazione italiana comprai un giornale, con la speranza che mi facesse addormentare. Lo spiegai, e al lume del lampadino elettrico, mi misi a leggere.
      At the first Italian station, I bought a newspaper, hoping it would put me to sleep. I unfolded it, and I started reading by the light of the electric lamp.
  4. (by extension, mining) station
  5. a place of residence
  6. (palaeoethnology) a type of prehistorical human settlement
  7. (biogeography) a place inhabited by one or more species
    Synonym: biotopo
  8. a vacation place
  9. a place where workers are stationed
    1. station (place where one performs a task or where one is on call to perform a task)
    2. station (place used for broadcasting radio or television)
    3. store
      • 1343, Giovanni Boccaccio, Amorosa visione [Loving Vision]‎[3], published 1833, page 48:
        E secondochè alcuni degni di fede raccontano, [] egli essendo una volta tra le altre in Siena, e avvenutosi per accidente alla stazione d'uno speziale
        And according to some reliable sources, one of the times he [Dante] was in Siena, and had by chance happened upon a grocer's store

Usage notes edit

  • The noun is nowadays regarded as feminine only; its usage as masculine is obsolete.

Derived terms edit

Related terms edit

Descendants edit

  • Maltese: stazzjon

Further reading edit

  • stazione in Treccani.it – Vocabolario Treccani on line, Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana