capisce

/kəˈpiʃ/

UK: /kəˈpiːʃ/

capisce

English Intj Top 30,024
Ad

Definition

Used by a listener to confirm that they have understood something said to them: I got it, I heard you, I understand.

Etymology

Unadapted borrowing from the spoken Neapolitan and Sicilian equivalents of either of the following: * Italian capisce (literally “he, she, etc., understands”), the third-person singular present indicative form; or * capisci (literally “you understand”) (possibly with the final vowel dropped or reduced in informal speech), the second-person singular present indicative form; of capire (“to understand”), from Latin capere, the present active infinitive of capiō (“to capture, catch, seize; to comprehend, understand; etc.”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *kap- (“to grab, seize; to hold”).

Example Sentences

  • ""I have a niece." / "No children?" / "Not married." / "What is the problem?" / "I'm single. No wife, no kids. No problem." / "Capisce." / "Yeah, capisce.""
  • ""It’s simple. Here's the rules: One of us says 'Never Have I Ever' and finishes the sentence. If you've done whatever the thing is, you drink. Yeah?" / "Capisce." I salute and he laughs."
  • ""I just want the father to be around. So you have to return home safe. Capisce?" / "Yeah, capisce.""
Ad