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Choosing the Auxiliary in Italian Compound Tenses (avere vs. essere)

Luca P

Have you ever wondered how to choose the correct auxiliary verb in Italian compound tenses?

The traditional rule linking auxiliary choice to a verb's transitivity seems logical, but it quickly becomes abstract and impractical for learners. Instead of forcing students to classify a verb before they understand its meaning, it's more helpful to decide the auxiliary from what the action actually does: does it transform or move the subject, or does it act on an object or on the world?

The picture titled "La casa di ESSERE" is a useful mnemonic for beginners to remember verbs that typically take essere, but it’s limited.

Why the traditional "transitive vs. intransitive" rule is misleading

    The transitive/intransitive test looks neat on paper but often fails in real use: many verbs shift between transitive and intransitive senses depending on meaning, and students must decide a grammatical category before they understand the meaning. That leads to confusion and mistakes.
    Examples that break the simple rule:
        Correre — Sono corso a casa. (movement → essere) vs. Ho corso una maratona. (activity → avere)
        Passare — Abbiamo passato una serata tra coinquilini. (activity → avere) vs. Siamo passati da Antonio per fargli una sorpresa. (movement → essere)
    Because auxiliary choice depends on semantic effect (what the action does to the subject or the world), teaching only transitivity forces learners to apply a formal test that doesn't capture meaning-driven differences.

Practical alternative rule (meaning-based)

    Choose avere when the action affects an object, affects the world in general, or doesn’t affect the subject (including movements without a clear origin/destination).
    Choose essere when the action transforms the subject, describes the subject’s state, or moves the subject from one point to another (explicit or implicit).
    With essere, the past participle agrees in gender and number with the subject; with avere it is invariable unless a direct object precedes the verb.

Illustrative examples

Use avere (action on object / general action / no subject change / movement treated as an activity)

    Ho mangiato la mela.
    Abbiamo parlato tutta la sera.
    Hai corso una maratona.
    Avete corso tutta la giornata.
    Hanno passato una serata tra coinquilini.
    Ha aperto la finestra.

Use essere (subject transformed / subject-state / subject moves A→B)

    È cresciuto molto.
    Sono rimasta sorpresa.
    Sei corso a casa.
    Siamo andati a Roma.
    È diventata professoressa.

Problematic verbs (both auxiliaries possible — decide by meaning)

    Correre: Sono corso a casa (movement → essere) / Ho corso una maratona (event → avere)
    Passare: Siamo passati da Antonio (movement → essere) / Abbiamo passato una bella serata (event → avere)
    Salire, scendere, cambiare, iniziare, finire: use essere when the focus is subject change/movement/state; use avere when there is a direct object or the action is presented as an event.

Quick decision flow

    Does the verb change or describe the subject, or indicate movement of the subject from one place to another? → essere.
    Does the verb act on a direct object, describe an action in the world, or represent a movement without origin/destination? → avere.

A last word on weather, impersonal and modal verbs

    Weather verbs (piovere, nevicare, grandinare, etc.) can take either auxiliary (Ha piovuto molto; È piovuto molto), but use avere when there's a direct object (Ha piovuto rane).
    Impersonal verbs (verbs used only in the impersonal 3rd person, e.g., piacere, mancare, bastare, bisognare, sembrare in impersonal constructions) behave like states and therefore align with essere: the construction treats the situation as affecting someone rather than a subject acting on an object (Mi è piaciuto il film; È mancato un ingrediente).
    Modal verbs (dovere, potere, volere) normally take the auxiliary of the infinitive that follows: if the infinitive uses avere, the compound uses avere; if it uses essere, the compound uses essere. When a modal is followed by essere, use avere (Non ho potuto essere presente).
        Placement of clitic pronouns affects agreement and auxiliary selection in periphrastic constructions: when a clitic precedes the auxiliary, participle agreement (and auxiliary selection tied to agreement patterns) follows the clitic-fronted structure; when the clitic is attached to the infinitive, the auxiliary usually remains governed by the infinitive’s auxiliary. Compare: Non ci sono voluti andare (clitic before auxiliary → essere + agreement) vs. Non hanno potuto andarci (clitic attached to infinitive → avere).

Links
    Accademia della Crusca (2004). La scelta degli ausiliari. (online) accessed 25 of April 2026, https://accademiadellacrusca.it/it/consulenza/la-scelta-degli-ausiliari/130
    Bozzo, D. (2018). Essere o avere? La selezione dell’ausiliare tra teoria e didattica nell’insegnamento dell'italiano a stranieri. Italica Wratislaviensia, 9(2), 55–80. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.15804/IW.2018.09.16
 

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