Do you have a plastic bag for my things?
SAC-chet-to — three syllables, stress on the first. Double 'c' makes the consonant slightly harder.
A practical last-minute request at check-out when you need a bag for wet swimwear, shoes, or overflow from your luggage.
'Ha un sacchetto' uses formal 'avere'. 'Sacchetto di plastica' = plastic bag. 'Per le mie cose' = for my things. This is a minor but practical request that any hotel front desk can handle. Some Italian hotels no longer carry single-use plastic bags due to environmental regulations.
Ha una borsa di carta?
Do you have a paper bag?
Paper bags are increasingly preferred over plastic in Italian hotels and shops
Avete del nastro adesivo? La mia valigia si è aperta.
Do you have sticky tape? My suitcase has opened.
A more urgent practical request — hotels typically have basic supplies
Avete delle fascette per la valigia?
Do you have cable ties for the suitcase?
Ask for emergency luggage repair if a zip breaks
Since 2011, Italy has banned lightweight plastic bags in shops. Italian businesses now use paper or biodegradable bags. Hotels tend to have paper carrier bags with their logo, which serve both as a practical item and a branded souvenir.