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ITALIAN WORD OF THE DAY

Italian word of the day: ‘Maleducato’

It's only polite to learn this word.

Italian word of the day: 'Maleducato'
Photo: Annie Spratt/Unsplash/Nicolas Raymond

“Maleducata!”

A voice resounded from the other side of the particularly crowded Roman tram I was riding, in the tone of righteous indignation that Italians have mastered like few others.

Thankfully the term wasn’t directed at me: maleducato (for a male) or maleducata (female) means ‘rude’ or ‘bad-mannered’.

As my fellow passengers squabbled loudly over whether someone had pushed someone else, and as I exchanged exasperated eye rolls with the woman next to me and breathed a private sigh of relief not be involved, I thought about just how damning a term maleducato is. 

It essentially means ‘badly brought up’, so it’s an implicit diss on your parents too. 

Se i bambini sono maleducati, la colpa è dei genitori.
If children have bad manners, it’s the parents’ fault.

In its most condemnatory form – the one used by the irate passenger on my tram – un/a maleducato/a means ‘a yob’ or ‘a lout’: you use it as an insult to imply that someone is categorically, irreversibly a rude person.

Sei proprio un maleducato!
You’re a real yob!

You can soften the tone slightly by telling someone they’re acting rude, rather than that they are rude. You say that with the construction fare il maleducato.

Ora stai facendo la maleducata.
Now you’re just being rude.

Dai, non fare il maleducato.
Come on, don’t be rude.

Of course, maleducato has an opposite we can all aspire to: educato, ‘polite’ or ‘well-mannered’. 

È una ragazza molto educata.
She’s a very polite girl.

And with that in mind, I made sure to say permesso (‘excuse me’) and grazie (‘thank you’) as I squeezed my way off that tram. 

See our Word of the Day archive here. Do you have a favourite Italian word you’d like us to feature? If so, please email us with your suggestion.

Make sure you don’t miss any of our Italian words and expressions of the day: download our new app (available on Apple and Android) and then selecting the Italian Word of the Day in your Notification options via the User button.

Member comments

  1. I’ve found that the opposite of “maleducato” is more often “beneducato” rather than just “educato “.

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ITALIAN WORD OF THE DAY

Italian word of the day: ‘Baffi’

You'll be licking your chops over this word.

Italian word of the day: 'Baffi'

A word that can feel particularly satisfying to say in Italian is baffi: a moustache, or, on an animal, whiskers.

It takes the plural form in Italian, as it’s referring to the two halves of a moustache.

In fact English at one time did the same – moustache (which comes from the archaic Italian mostaccio) used to be used in the plural, but became standardised as singular in around the 19th century.

Ha dei baffi enormi.
He has an enormous moustache.

You don’t need impressive upper facial hair to talk about your baffi, though, as the word also features in certain everyday expressions.

Leccarsi i baffi is to lick your chops – if something is delicious or mouthwatering it’s da leccarsi i baffi.

Si stavano leccando i baffi.
They were licking their chops.

Ha preparato una cena da leccarsi i baffi.
He’s made a mouthwatering dinner.

Buonp Buonissimo Delizioso Da Leccarsi I Baffi Simpson Ned Flunders GIF - Yummy So Good Moustache GIFs
Source: Tenor

And ridere sotto i baffi (‘to laugh under your moustache’) is to laugh or snicker under your breath.

Ti ho visto ridere sotto i baffi.
I saw you snickering.

La smettete di ridere sotto i baffi!
Wipe those smirks off your faces!

The next time you want to express appreciation for a well-cooked meal or tell someone off for sniggering, you’ll know what just to say.

Do you have an Italian word you’d like us to feature? If so, please email us with your suggestion.

Make sure you don’t miss any of our Italian words and expressions of the day by downloading our new app (available on Apple and Android) and then selecting the Italian Word of the Day in your Notification options via the User button.

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