Italian phrase of the day: In gennaio la palestra è piena di gente
Ah, January. Not only is it a dark, cold month, and facing work after the holidays is an ordeal, but my one and only pleasure and pastime is spoilt, because
In gennaio la palestra è piena di gente
In January the gym is full of people
Literally: In January the gym is full of people (same word sequence, for once).
I prefer exercising when the gym is not too crowded, so I can go about my own business efficiently and not wait for twenty minutes for three sweaty guys to stop hogging the bench. So I usually go very early in the morning before going to work, and on Saturday and Sunday as soon as the gym opens.
January? Full. All the sodding time. I am thrilled that so many people want to do something about their health. Good for them. However, knowing that statistically a ridiculously high percentage will be back on the couch eating crisps in four weeks time makes me want to take a month out and just go out for runs.
But in seven weeks time my body has to come on holiday with me to Australia, and I want it to look OK. So unless I start running on my hands, I'll have to use the gym to train the upper body.
Roll on February: my birthday, Australia, and on top of that
In febbraio la palestra è vuota
In February the gym is empty
Literally: In February the gym is empty (again, both languages use the same exact word sequence)
If you want to find out more
- It is possibly more correct to say 'A gennaio' instead of 'In gennaio'. It is certainly more frequent, at least according to Google. I chose the latter because it is easier to remember if your first language is English.
- Months of the year (like days of the week) do not start with upper case in Italian.
- 'Gente' ('people') is singular (considered like a single entity, almost like a person) in Italian but plural (a group) in English. You need to keep this in mind when you use it in a sentence, for instance 'People are curious' translates to 'La gente è curiosa' (literally: The people is curious).
Tuesday 8 January 2008 at 3:12 am
When I told "The Wife" that you were doing the Italian phrase of the day on your blog and played her the audio clips, she asked if there was a photo of you in your boxers here too. She still speaks fondly of your co-excursions to the kitchen for a late night nosh in the days immediately preceding our wedding. She keeps hoping that you will turn up here again for late night snacks