uopo
Italian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈwɔ.po/
- Rhymes: -ɔpo
- Hyphenation: uò‧po
Noun
uopo m (plural (literary, very rare) uopi)
- (archaic or literary, rare) need
- early 14th century, Dante, “Canto XVII”, in Purgatorio, lines 58–60:
- Sì fa con noi, come l’uom si fa sego;
ché quale aspetta prego e l’uopo vede,
malignamente già si mette al nego.- He acts towards us as a man acts towards himself, for he who awaits for a request and sees the need is already malignantly preparing for refusal.
- 1763, Giuseppe Parini, “Il mattino [Morning]”, in Opere dell'abate Giuseppe Parini - Volume primo [Works of abbot Giuseppe Parini - Volume one], Venice: Giacomo Storti, published 1803, page 58:
- […] esso a mill'uopi
Opportuno si vanta […]- It is said it is suitable for a thousand needs
- 1782, Vittorio Alfieri, “Atto quinto, Scena V”, in Saul, collected in Tragedie di Vittorio Alfieri - Volume secondo, Florence, published 1833, page 53:
- Eccoti solo, o re; non un ti resta
Dei tanti amici, o servi tuoi. – Sei paga,
D'inesorabil Dio terribil ira? –
Ma, tu mi resti, o brando: all'ultim'uopo,
Fido ministro, or vieni. […]- Here you stand alone, o king; not one is left to you of your many friends, or servants. Are you satisfied, o terrible wrath of an inexorable God? But you are left to me, o sword: in the last need, faithful servant, now come.
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Derived terms
Further reading
- uopo in Treccani.it – Vocabolario Treccani on line, Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana
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