Reflexive Verbs
Verbi Riflessivi
Reflexive Verbs in Italian
Overview
Reflexive verbs are verbs where the action reflects back onto the subject — the person doing the action is also receiving it. In English, this concept appears with words like "myself," "yourself," and "herself," but in Italian, reflexive verbs are far more common and form an essential part of everyday speech.
You will recognize reflexive verbs in the dictionary by the ending -si attached to the infinitive: chiamarsi (to call oneself / to be called), svegliarsi (to wake up), alzarsi (to get up). To conjugate them, you remove the -si, conjugate the verb normally, and place the correct reflexive pronoun before it.
Reflexive verbs are especially common when describing daily routines — getting up, washing, getting dressed, going to sleep — making them essential vocabulary at the A1 level.
How It Works
Reflexive Pronouns
Each subject has a corresponding reflexive pronoun that goes before the conjugated verb:
| Person | Pronoun | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| io | mi | myself |
| tu | ti | yourself |
| lui / lei / Lei | si | himself / herself / yourself (formal) |
| noi | ci | ourselves |
| voi | vi | yourselves |
| loro | si | themselves |
Conjugation Example: chiamarsi (to be called)
| Person | Conjugation | Translation |
|---|---|---|
| io | mi chiamo | my name is (I call myself) |
| tu | ti chiami | your name is |
| lui / lei | si chiama | his/her name is |
| noi | ci chiamiamo | our names are |
| voi | vi chiamate | your names are |
| loro | si chiamano | their names are |
The verb part (chiamo, chiami, chiama...) follows regular -ARE conjugation. The reflexive pronoun simply goes in front.
Common Reflexive Verbs
| Infinitive | Meaning |
|---|---|
| chiamarsi | to be called |
| svegliarsi | to wake up |
| alzarsi | to get up |
| lavarsi | to wash (oneself) |
| vestirsi | to get dressed |
| addormentarsi | to fall asleep |
| prepararsi | to get ready |
| sentirsi | to feel |
| trovarsi | to find oneself / to be located |
| divertirsi | to enjoy oneself / to have fun |
Examples in Context
| Italian | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Mi chiamo Marco. | My name is Marco. | Most common way to introduce yourself |
| Mi sveglio alle sette. | I wake up at seven. | Daily routine |
| Ti alzi presto la mattina? | Do you get up early in the morning? | Question form — pronoun stays before verb |
| Lei si lava le mani. | She washes her hands. | Reflexive used for body parts |
| Ci vestiamo velocemente. | We get dressed quickly. | Noi form |
| I bambini si addormentano tardi. | The children fall asleep late. | Loro form |
| Vi divertite alla festa? | Are you all having fun at the party? | Voi form |
| Mi preparo per uscire. | I get ready to go out. | Preparing oneself |
| Come ti chiami? | What is your name? | Essential A1 question |
| Si sente bene oggi. | He/She feels well today. | Describing how someone feels |
| Ci troviamo al bar alle otto. | We meet at the bar at eight. | "Trovarsi" = to meet up |
| Mi lavo i denti ogni mattina. | I brush my teeth every morning. | Literally "I wash myself the teeth" |
| Non mi alzo mai prima delle sei. | I never get up before six. | Negation: non goes before the pronoun |
Common Mistakes
Forgetting the reflexive pronoun
- Wrong: Chiamo Marco.
- Right: Mi chiamo Marco.
- Why: Without "mi," the sentence means "I call Marco" (calling someone else), not "My name is Marco." The reflexive pronoun is what makes the action reflect back on the subject.
Placing the pronoun after the conjugated verb
- Wrong: Sveglio mi alle sette.
- Right: Mi sveglio alle sette.
- Why: With conjugated verbs, the reflexive pronoun always goes before the verb. It only attaches to the end with infinitives (svegliarsi) and a few other forms you will learn later.
Using the wrong pronoun for the subject
- Wrong: Tu mi alzi presto.
- Right: Tu ti alzi presto.
- Why: The pronoun must match the subject. "Tu" pairs with "ti," not "mi." Each person has its own reflexive pronoun.
Confusing reflexive and non-reflexive meanings
- Wrong: Mi chiamo il dottore. (intending "I call the doctor")
- Right: Chiamo il dottore. (I call the doctor) vs. Mi chiamo Marco. (My name is Marco)
- Why: Many verbs have both reflexive and non-reflexive forms with different meanings. Adding "mi" changes the meaning entirely.
Placing "non" after the pronoun
- Wrong: Mi non sveglio presto.
- Right: Non mi sveglio presto.
- Why: In negative sentences, "non" comes before the reflexive pronoun: non + pronoun + verb.
Practice Tips
- Narrate your morning routine using reflexive verbs: "Mi sveglio, mi alzo, mi lavo, mi vesto..." This builds muscle memory with the most common reflexive verbs in a natural sequence.
- Practice "Come ti chiami?" dialogues with imaginary characters, cycling through all persons: "Mi chiamo..., Si chiama..., Ci chiamiamo..." This locks in both the question form and all pronoun-verb pairings.
- Compare reflexive and non-reflexive pairs to feel the difference: "Lavo la macchina" (I wash the car) vs. "Mi lavo" (I wash myself). This helps you understand when and why the reflexive pronoun is needed.
Related Concepts
- Prerequisite: Regular -ARE Verbs — reflexive verbs follow the same conjugation patterns, with the addition of pronouns
- Next steps: Reflexive Verbs in Past — how to use reflexive verbs in the passato prossimo
- Next steps: Impersonal Si — the impersonal use of "si" for general statements
Prerequisite
Regular -ARE VerbsA1Concepts that build on this
More A1 concepts
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