Italian Swear Words - Jessica’s 8 Favorites

by Jessica on April 14, 2008

by Jessica | April 14th, 2008

washing mouth out with soapWhen you’re learning a new language, one of the most fun parts is learning how to swear. Of course, Italian swear words always sound prettier to my non-Italian ear than their English equivalents, but just because they sound prettier doesn’t mean their meaning is! When I was teaching Italian, one of the most common questions I’d get from students - always after class, in hushed tones - was stuff like, “How do you say ’shit’ in Italian?” With that in mind, here are my 8 favorite Italian swear words.

Update: Now you can hear sample pronunciations for some of these words - wherever you see a blue arrow underneath the word, click on it and you’ll hear exactly how to say it!

And be sure to check out the second installment, Italian swear words part 2 - readers’ choice!

8. Accidenti! (ah-chee-DEN-tee)

Let’s start with something G-rated, shall we? This is the less-questionable version of “merda” (see #6) - when you want to say a euphemism like “crap” instead of swearing and saying “shit,” you’d say “accidenti.” It looks so much more innocent, doesn’t it? Almost like, “Oh, what a horrible accident that I almost said a bad word” or something. Anyway, this is the one to internalize so that you don’t let loose with any of the really bad ones in front of passing nuns.

7. Madonna! (mah-DOHN-nah)
While many Italian stereotypes turn out to be less true on the ground in Italy than you might have expected them to be, the one about Italians using “mamma mia!” as an exclamation of surprise or annoyance holds water - they actually do use it. But personally, I prefer the equally common “Madonna!” if for no other reason than it amuses me in this predominantly Catholic country. You can even pair this one with “porca” (see #1) for more emphatic (and less polite) uses.

6. Merda! (MEHR-dah)
Now, because I’d often get the “How do you say ’shit’ in Italian?” question from students, I’ve learned this one - but I’ve honestly not heard it as much in Italy as I have some of the other swear words on this page. This is, however, how you say “shit” in Italian, and it’s used in exactly the same way we use it in English. It also is incorporated into other phrases for more colorful meanings as well.

5. Cazzo! (KAHTZ-soh)

This is the other question I’d get from the occasional (bolder) students - “How do you say ‘fuck’ in Italian?” This is the answer - “cazzo” - although it literally is a colorful term for “penis” (see below), and this one you do hear.

4. Testa di cazzo! (TES-tah dee KAHTZ-soh)
Sometimes translating things literally is what makes these swear words amusing to me - but sometimes it works out quite well, and that’s the case with this little gem. Instead of calling someone a “dickhead,” in Italian you’d call them a “head of dick,” or a “testa di cazzo.” Which, really, is the same thing, right? This is also a general way of calling someone an “asshole,” but the Italian “testa di cazzo” has a bit more spice and so isn’t language you’ll want to use in polite company. “Cazzo” has lots of uses in Italian, like “culo” (see #3).

3. Vaffanculo! (vah-fahn-KOO-loh)

This is a red-hot number, so use it with caution. It’s the Italian equivalent of “fuck off” or “go fuck yourself,” but literally means something vaguely like “go do it in the ass.” “Culo” on its own (meaning “ass,” but in a much more vulgar way than the English can really translate) has many, many uses in Italian, but this is the one non-Italians can latch onto quickly - which is both entertaining and a bit dangerous! The accompanying gesture for “vaffanculo” is the same as it is in English - a middle finger.

2. Cavolo! (KAH-voh-loh)
Here’s an example of an exclamation that is really only funny to me because I translate it literally in my head when I hear it. “Cavolo” literally means “cabbage,” but when you say it emphatically it’s kind of like the equivalent of “holy crap!” or a more forceful version of “wow!” Even better, in my humble opinion, is what happens when you put the innocuous-looking “che” in front of it - “che cavolo?” offered as a question is kind of like saying, “what the fuck?” but you’re really saying, “what cabbage?” Ah, I love that.

1. Porca vacca! (POR-kah VAH-kah)
This is my favorite one, hands down. In English, I’ve got lots of ways to say, “well, dammit!” in varying degrees of colorful language. In Italian, it’s no different. “Porca vacca” literally means “pig cow,” but it’s used in much the same way we’d say, “crap!” or “damn!” or the like - it’s not the most polite way to say it, but it’s also not the worst. What I particularly love about it is the literal translation (it cracks me up to think people are saying, “pig cow!”), and what’s fun about this is that you can put “porca” in front of just about anything. “Porca vacca” is my favorite for its literal silliness, but “porca miseria” (”miserable pig” or “pig poverty”) is a very close second-favorite for my perceived sense of the melodrama that goes with it. You’ll hear variations on these at Italian sporting events when the home team does something stupid.

So, those are my 8 favorite Italian swear words. I know some of my readers know some colorful Italian phrases, so what are your favorites? Leave a comment below to share it with us!

And for more Italian slang and swear words, you could do much worse than Deirdre’s list on Beginning With I - she explains lots of the slang you might hear while in Italy, both polite and decidedly not so.

Bonus: Fare i gattini (FAH-rey ee gaht-TEE-nee)
Okay, I’ve never heard this one personally, but while researching the colorful world of Italian swear words, I discovered that to say someone is throwing up or (even more colorfully) “barfing one’s guts out,” you’d use this phrase - “fare i gattini.” Which literally would mean that you were “having kittens.” So, I have to wonder - what does one say when one’s cat is actually having kittens?


{ 67 comments }

Mary April 14, 2008 at 4:04 am
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Don’t laugh! Oh, go ahead! When my cat is really having kittens, I’d say il mio gatto sta avendo kittens. No one would probably understand me. Then again, maybe they would, but they’d laugh!

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Grey April 14, 2008 at 8:44 am
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Testa di cazzo has got to be my all time favourite. Haha, thanks for posting these ^^

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Gianfranco April 14, 2008 at 11:45 am
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You forgot my all time favorite Porca Miseria. Which can be used in a varying array of situations such as when your team loses a big match, or if some ass hole bumps into you at the pub.

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Jessica April 14, 2008 at 1:07 pm
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Thanks for the comment, Gianfranco - I stuck “porca miseria” in with “porca vacca” at #1, but it probably should have had its own entry. It is quite a good one. :)

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Stefano April 15, 2008 at 10:16 am
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Hi there. Jessica you forgot “Minchia” the southern expression for “Cazzo”! That’s slang!!! I’ll check this page later on….i want to be updated!

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Jessica April 15, 2008 at 12:09 pm
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Thanks for the addition, Stefano - I thought “minchia” meant something else? Or maybe it does but it’s used the same way “cazzo” is?

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ergo April 15, 2008 at 1:48 pm
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You stupid idiot,,, “porca vaca”, cannot be translated literally to “pig cow”.

It obviously means “dirty(pig) whore(cow)”…

If you had just one sinapse in your tiny brain you would be able to figure it out.

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Jessica April 15, 2008 at 5:58 pm
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Ma dai… There’s no reason to be rude, is there?

I know it’s not literally “pig cow,” but just as you pointed out in your translation the words on their own can be taken as “pig” and “cow.” That’s where I find the humor. And humor is, of course, a personal thing. Ain’t that the beauty of it?

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Costanza April 16, 2008 at 2:48 am
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Ok. That’s right. Just one thing. If “madonna” is quite accepted even in catholic places,(and it’s said also by polite old ladies) if you say “porca madonna” is considerd blasphemy (and actually, it is) so, i recommend not to use it too often. I may not be offended by it, but not everybody will be as open minded in my country.

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Jessica April 16, 2008 at 8:05 am
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That’s a good point, Costanza. Putting “porca” in front of a word - any word, even a completely polite one - totally negates its politeness!

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Stefano April 16, 2008 at 8:24 am
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Hi jessica! i loved this article, i still can’t stop laughing.
i think foreign people’s interest in italian swearing is.. uhm.. curious :D

btw, “fare i gattini” is meant like “behaving like kittens” so, as you said, throw up. but it’s not really common!

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JT April 16, 2008 at 1:15 pm
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Hello Jessica, this is quite funny! But I have question: I met this fellow from Ancona who used a term that sounded like, and I’ll just try to spell it phonetically, sapristi, maybe sopristi … does this ring any bells? He used it when something he was cooking came apart and landed on the floor.

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Gio April 16, 2008 at 3:07 pm
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You should add in “Che cazzo…” meaning roughly, “what the fuck…” I’ve heard it quite a lot in Italy.

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oenophil April 16, 2008 at 3:14 pm
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Perhaps ergo should learn to spell synapse. Apparently rudeness and stupidity go together.

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Jessica April 16, 2008 at 4:17 pm
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JT, that’s a good question - I don’t know that one, but I’ll see what I can find out. I’m always in the market for a good new swear word. :) (A quick search online tells me that “sapristi” is a French exclamation, albeit a bit old-fashioned, and means something like “good heavens.”)

Gio, yes, “che cazzo” is a good one. Thanks for the addition!

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Ahndhi April 16, 2008 at 4:38 pm
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The best Italian swear word I ever learned was “leccaculo.” Literally, it means to lick some one’s asshole/penis. But, it’s used like kiss-ass is in the US. It’s certainly not for polite conversation, or for the person you’re describing.

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Giuseppe April 17, 2008 at 5:53 am
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Hi Jessica, “Vaffanculo” and condensed “Fanculo”, is the swear word most used in italy.
It is so popular that Beppe Grillo, a comic man involved in politics, has used it for a protestation days. The “VaffanculoDay” and the “Vaffanculo2Day”.
For more information about this initiative, this is the link: http://www.beppegrillo.it/eng/

Bye bye

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dioz April 17, 2008 at 7:00 am
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hi jessica,
i’m italian but i never hear “fare gattini” anyway your list it’s very funny!
My favorite one is “sticazzi” (STEE KAHTZ EE) translated -> “this penis” it’s most used in Rome and is a corrispettive for “who care” but more ironical.
Bella!

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SumBunni April 17, 2008 at 9:59 pm
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My grandmother’s favorite expression was “Porca putana” roughly translated to ‘dirty prostitute.

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SilverStudent April 18, 2008 at 4:52 am
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I know that when a student comes to America the first thing they learn are dirty words. I think that’s because it’s said the most.
Thanks for the heads up for understanding what they are saying in Italian!
Elementary teacher in USA

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Dinelli April 20, 2008 at 7:22 pm
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FILIO DI PUTANA (SOB) really more like son of a whore.

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Paul April 22, 2008 at 6:09 am
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My all time favourite is “stronzo!” As in “ma che stronzo!” What a bastard!

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mele419 April 23, 2008 at 7:34 pm
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Puttana is one everyone should know, whore.
As well as Stronzo, which can mean a lot of things…Asshole, jerkoff, cunt, fucker, etc etc.
I often like to combine vaffunculo with another insult, such as cazzo or stronzo.
(vaffunculo cazzo would be like ‘fuck you, dick[or asshole]” not ‘fuck you fuck’)
And there are a MYRIAD of vulgar terms in italian, most of them interchangable.

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lagatta April 27, 2008 at 2:54 am
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I’m glad someone mentioned the common “stronzo” - that literally means turd but is used in the sense of arsehole. It can also be affectionate.

A really big or bad arsehole, such as Berlusconi, is a Stronzone.

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porca figa April 27, 2008 at 2:56 am
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“porca…” + X,Y or Z is everywhere - it’s their swear utility word (ranging in intensity). “Porco-vacca” is my favorite for the same reason as Jessica. This country eats a lot of pork, so considering them to be so filthy (”sporca” = dirty) is in itself sort of funny. The pan-ultimate swear is to say “porco-d*o” where “d*o” = “God” in Italian. It’s apparently too horrid for me to write here - my Italian wife flinched when I asked her about this one. In southern Italy, there’s a rather diffused expression, “mizzica” that means penis in Sicilian dialect. “Minchia” is, however, a rather tame expression meaning, “whaaa..?!” Bad to confuse these… Also, bad to confuse fico (”cool”) with fica (”pussy”) or figa (”fig”). I went to a bakery and asked a very surprised attendant for “one chocolate fig, with an almond inside…no, three please.” I messed up the pronunciation and ended up sounding quite vulgar.

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Jessica April 27, 2008 at 7:51 am
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Great additions, everyone. Looks like I’ll have to do a follow-up post. :)

And porca figa, that’s too funny about messing up the pronunciation when asking for the ‘chocolate fig with an almond inside’ at the pastry shop… I can only imagine the stunned look on the shopkeeper’s face…

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petnos April 27, 2008 at 9:10 am
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interesting!!!

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AnonLearner April 28, 2008 at 12:50 am
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Nice post.

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tandmark April 28, 2008 at 6:46 pm
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I agree with Gio that ‘Che cazzo. . .’ is worth special mention.

How about ‘fessa’ (cunt), found in a phrase often used by an Apulian pal of mine, ‘Fessa di mammete!’ or ‘La fessa di mammete!’ meaning something like ‘Your mamma’s cunt!’ To which he taught me to reply, ‘Che cazzo dice?’ meaning ‘What the fuck you talkin’ about?’

Such a musical language, Italian. 8>))

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aron April 30, 2008 at 3:10 pm
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My friends and like to exclaim some of the in english.. for instance when something is really messed up we shout “How Balls!”

I have yet to discover why “porco dio” and “dio cane” really tick some folks off :)

I mean they tell me why, but I still don’t *understand*

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joanna May 1, 2008 at 5:22 am
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I don’t know the spelling but ‘fesse di mama’

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Travel Guide July 27, 2008 at 6:21 am
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Its very true. While learning a new language anyone will tend to learn the cuss words and the swear words in the beginning. Its real fun to start with. To abuse someone/something is the easiest of the expressions.

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Eric August 6, 2008 at 9:19 am
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What I want to know is - are there any good Italian words that sound like strong swear words to foreign ears while actually meaning totally benign things like “lamp” or “butterfly” or whatever? Would be fun to create a post for the top 10 Italian words that sound like fantastic swear words but actually aren’t (and the worst sounding while the more pleasant the meaning the better).

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Jessica August 6, 2008 at 2:08 pm
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Eric, that’s a great idea - I’ll have to see if I can come up with just such a list. And perhaps one of innocuous-sounding words that will curl your Italian grandmother’s hair, too! :)

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andrea August 16, 2008 at 12:31 pm
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I just learned the word for “darn it!” It sounds really angry, but it’s harmless…Managgia!

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emily August 27, 2008 at 12:09 pm
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how do you say basterd and bitch?

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Jessica September 6, 2008 at 9:05 am
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Hi, Emily:

The literal translation for bastard is simply “bastardo” (bah-STAR-doh), which has both a technical meaning (child of unmarried parents) and an insulting one.

The Italian word for bitch is “cagna” (KAHN-yah).

Use them wisely. :)

Ciao,
Jessica

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antux93 September 27, 2008 at 4:17 am
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Actually, “accidenti” isn’t a real swear word… is just an esclamation like your “damn!”.

Anyway, the swear word I prevalently say is “porca puttana!!!” (POR-kah put-tah-nah), or “ma porca puttana!”, the “ma” (mah) gives more emphasis :P
or… “porca troia!”… troia is like the city troy, but in italian “troia” (and “puttana” too) means also “whore”.

Another swear word I like is “minchia” (the pronunciation is something like mean-key-ah)/”testa di minchia”, which are variation of “cazzo”/”testa di cazzo!”… as a matter of fact, “minchia” is a vulgar way to say penis/cock/shaft etc xD

Sorry for my bad english :P Send me and e-mail if you wanna know more xDDD

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Tyler October 13, 2008 at 7:43 pm
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Ma va a cager sei dice Parma. Not certain on the spelling, but this I hear very regularly from natives of Emilia Romagna. Literally meaning “go take a shit”. this would definitely be on my list of favorites along with culo alle balena (whale’s ass), che cazzo voi? (what the fuck do you want?), pezzo di merda (piece of shit) and schiffo al cazzo (i commonly hear this used as “tastes like shit/dick”)

a few others ive heard from various Italians: Sporca figa troia (dirty slut/pussy), scopa mi(fuck me, used when upset), scopare ( to fuck, in Parmesan dialect), orrechione (fag/queer), fate sega (masturbate/ jerk off), testa di merda (shithead), and this one i read, and enjoyed it very much, Ciao, cara, fammi un bel pompino!

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Lydia October 27, 2008 at 8:08 am
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i’m in italy this year for an exchange and i’ve got all of my friends here teaching me swears, mostly sicilian ones (i’m in catania, sicily). i know this is an old post, but i just wanted to add a couple of things.

minchia and cazzo are also used as another form of ‘fuck!.’ also, facci’ minchia is another form of teste di cazzo, and it means fuck face!

:D ciao

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Lydia October 27, 2008 at 8:11 am
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oh! another thing. i just read tyler’s post above mine and he wrote ‘che cazzo voi?’ in sicilian, che cazzo voi is ‘chi spakkiu voi?’

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trento December 19, 2008 at 4:18 pm
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my momma had a good one actually she had lots of good ones bless her heart.Vacca Putana….cow whore i luv that one

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connie January 19, 2009 at 7:42 pm
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just in response to previous posts,
“fessa di mamma” means, essentially, “your mother’s cunt” and, in conjunction with certain verbs, is probably the most offensive phrase you could tell any Italian man.

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Iota March 7, 2009 at 9:41 pm
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“Che cavolo” is a more restrained version of “Che cazzo.” It’s the equivalent of our “what the frick” or “what the F” People will use “Che Cavolo” when they’re joking around but “che cazzo” when they’re truly agitated.

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Valerio March 13, 2009 at 2:48 am
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Prco Dio is also very useful by us in ROME!
Ciao, รจ bello vedere che l’italiano interessa a qualcuno… almeno per le parolacce.
(Bye, it’s nice to see italian is intresting for someone, even though it’s only for swearing!)

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benny March 22, 2009 at 12:35 pm
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Does anyone know the meaning of this phrase? Not sure of the spelling– but it sounds like “a fonda mahtz.” My parents used to say it a lot.

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Jessica March 22, 2009 at 5:19 pm
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Hmm… It doesn’t sound familiar to me, Benny, but there’s a verb “affondare” (the 3rd person singular would be “affonda”) which means “to sink” or “to drop.” It could also be a dialect, in which case I’m going to be no help whatsoever. :) What part of Italy are your parents from?

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benny March 23, 2009 at 3:38 pm
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Dad was from Calabria, mom from Sicily…evrybody in my family was either a cop or a mobster

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Jessica March 24, 2009 at 9:53 am
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Then I’d say it’s highly likely that’s a saying in dialect.

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jarred March 30, 2009 at 11:44 pm
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italian teacher here i come

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