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ITALIAN WORD OF THE DAY

Italian expression of the day: ‘Essere al verde’

If one of your Italian pals claims to be ‘at the green’ during your next night out, prepare to pay for their drinks

Italian word of the day: 'Essere al verde'
Photo: Annie Spratt/Unsplash/Nicolas Raymond

Who hasn’t at least once in their life opened their online banking app and stared with absolute dread at the balance, wondering how on earth they managed to squander away their savings in the space of a week?

If it’s any comfort, it happens to the best of us and we are definitely not here to judge.

But let us not stray from the purpose of this article, which is to teach you the Italian way to say that you’re stone broke. So, the next time you’re as poor as a church mouse, you can share the news with linguistic richness, at least.

One of, if not the, most popular Italian idiom on the subject is ‘essere al verde’, which can be roughly translated to ‘being at the green’. Naturally, any possible use of the expression requires the speaker to properly conjugate the verb ‘to be’ (‘essere’), as in the following instances:

Q: Vuoi andare a cena fuori stasera?

A: Scusami. Sono al verde. Facciamo la prossima volta.

Q: Would you like to dine out tonight?

A: I’m sorry. I’m running low on funds. Next time.

Q: Riusciresti a prestarmi 20 euro?

A: No e non mi interessa se sei al verde.

Q: Could I borrow 20 euros from you?

A: No and I don’t care that you’re feeling the pinch.

As you can see from the above examples, the expression is mostly used in informal, ordinary conversations, though it is sometimes used in published pieces of work, especially in rather humorous and/or provocative newspaper articles and comic books.

– Di certo oggi i conti del Carroccio sono al verde. [From Italian newspaper La Repubblica, June 29th 2018]

– Surely, the Carroccio’s finances are strained at the moment.

Now that you have a basic grasp of how to use the expression, you might be wondering where ‘essere al verde’ came from.

You might actually be puzzled as to why Italians associate the colour green with being penniless seeing as, in the English-speaking world, the most popular hue for such delicate matters is red. 

Well, much like many other Italian idioms, ‘essere al verde’ originated from a pretty interesting ancient custom. In Renaissance-era Florence, wax candles whose bottom ends had been painted green were used to time public auctions. The latter were officially declared finished as soon as the candle would be ‘at the green’ (‘al verde’). 

Over time, the expression ‘al verde’ made its way out of Tuscan auction houses and became extremely popular all across the country as a way to say that someone was running low on something. For instance, if an army was ‘al verde di soldati’, it had very few soldiers left among its ranks. 

Eventually, the expression was also applied to personal finances – or, I should say, the dearth thereof. ‘Essere al verde di denari’ (i.e. ‘having little money left’) quickly became a widely used colloquial idiom and that’s precisely the lexical form that has made it all the way into modern Italian.

These days, native speakers are far more likely to use the shortened version of the expression (‘essere al verde’) rather than the full-length one (‘essere al verde di denari/soldi’) because, well, who likes to be long-winded when being strapped for cash?

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ITALIAN WORD OF THE DAY

Italian expression of the day: ‘Senza infamia e senza lode’

This phrase packs more punch than it seems.

Italian expression of the day: 'Senza infamia e senza lode'

Spend much time on Italian-language Tripadvisor, and you’re bound to eventually come across the phrase senza infamia e senza lode – ‘without infamy or praise’. (Find the pronunciation here.)

It’s used to describe something mediocre, with no major defects but also no particular qualities to recommend it.

You’ll often come across it in online reviews of hotels or restaurants, though you might also hear it used to describe books or films.

It generally refers something that’s a bit bland and lacks originality (in spoken Italian, it’s usually used by older generations).

– Il cibo non era niente di speciale – senza infamia e senza lode.
– The food was nothing to write home about – just OK.

– Com’era il film ieri sera?
– Eh, senza infamia e senza lode.

– How was the film last night?
– Eh, pretty mediocre.

The expression has somewhat loftier origins than its modern-day use in Google reviews, however, having been penned by none other than the father of the Italian language, Dante Alighieri.

Specifically, ‘senza infamia e senza lode’ is the expression Dante uses in his Divine Comedy to describe the ignavi, or Lukewarms/Apathetics.

Contemptible, cowardly beings who stayed on the sidelines throughout their lives, standing for neither good nor evil, the ignavi are admitted neither to heaven or hell but are exiled to the Anti-Inferno.

There they are condemned to forever run around naked chasing a banner buffeted by gusts of wind (representing a cause they never took up), tormented by stinging wasps and hornets (trying to startle them into action), while maggots suck their blood mixed with their tears.

Says Virgil to Dante:

Questo misero modo
tegnon l’anime triste di coloro
che visser sanza ’nfamia e sanza lodo.

Mischiate sono a quel cattivo coro
de li angeli che non furon ribelli
né fur fedeli a Dio, ma per sé fuoro.

Caccianli i ciel per non esser men belli,
né lo profondo inferno li riceve,
ch’alcuna gloria i rei avrebber d’elli…

Fama di loro il mondo esser non lassa;
misericordia e giustizia li sdegna:
non ragioniam di lor, ma guarda e passa

This wretched state
The sorry souls of those endure
Who without shame and without honor lived.

They are commingled with that caitiff crew
Of angels, who neither rebels were,
Nor true to God, but for themselves.

In order not to be less beautiful,
Heaven drove them out; the deeps of Hell receive them not,
Lest damned souls should glory over them…

The world does not permit report of them;
Mercy and Justice disdain them:
Speak not of them, but look and pass.

Dante was famously permanently exiled from his hometown of Florence after speaking out against the pope (despite being offered an amnesty if he agreed to admit his guilt and pay a fine) – so his disdain for those unwilling to ever risk anything for their beliefs is understandable.

Of course, if you come across the phrase today you don’t think of tormented souls: over the centuries, it’s become watered down to its meaning in popular usage of ‘mediocre/middling’.

But the next time you see or hear senza infamia e senza lode used to describe a disappointing meal out, you’ll know where the expression comes from – and the strength of feeling behind it.

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