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PhrasesAt the PortIl mare è bello oggi.
A1informal

Il mare è bello oggi.

The sea is beautiful today.

Pronunciation

'Bello' — BEL-lo. Double 'l' briefly held; stress on the first syllable.

When to use it

Use this as a conversation starter with locals at the port, on the deck, or at a seafront café. Italians love to comment on the sea and the weather.

What it means

'Bello' is one of the most versatile adjectives in Italian. It changes form before nouns (bel sole, bell'uomo, bella giornata, bei giorni) but stays as 'bello' after the verb 'essere'. The simple present + adjective is the most basic Italian sentence structure.

Variations

Che bella giornata!

What a beautiful day!

Exclamative form using 'che' + adjective + noun.

Il mare è liscio come l'olio oggi.

The sea is like oil today (glass-smooth).

Idiomatic expression for a perfectly calm sea.

Peccato che domani arriva il vento.

What a shame that the wind is coming tomorrow.

Uses the subjunctive after 'peccato che'.

Mini Dialogue

— Il mare è bello oggi! — Sì, raro per novembre. Approfittiamone. — È già tardi per fare il bagno? — In Sicilia fino a ottobre ci si fa ancora.

— The sea is beautiful today! — Yes, rare for November. Let's make the most of it. — Is it already too late to swim? — In Sicily you can still swim until October.

Cultural Note

Italians have a deep cultural relationship with the sea — 'il mare' is a constant in art, literature, song, and food. The Italian coastline is the longest in Western Europe (7,500 km). Comments about the sea are a common icebreaker in coastal towns.