If you’re in Italy at the moment, you’ve probably heard this phrase (or some variation on it) a hundred times already this week.
And if you’ve got enough energy left to speak, you may have uttered it a few times yourself.
– Mamma mia, oggi fa caldo!
– Mamma mia, it’s hot today!
The fact that caldo sounds a lot like the English word ‘cold’ confuses plenty of beginner Italian students. But it definitely means ‘hot’. (Imagine a bubbling cauldron – that word has the same Latin root as caldo.)
It’s also curious that instead of using the verb essere (to be), Italians use fare (to do or make) here. So the phrase literally translates as “It makes hot” rather than “it is hot”.
Fa caldo should always be said with a note of incredulity for maximum effect – because who was anticipating this heat in Italy, in July?
I tend to exclaim “fa caldo!” automatically every time I open the car door on a hot day and get hit in the face by a wall of hot air – as if I wasn’t fully expecting that to happen.
And then I mutter it again as I slide into the hot seat and frantically push at the AC buttons.
Don’t forget to make yourself sound particularly incredulous by making sure the stress falls heavily on the second syllable: “fah-CAL-do”.
If the heat is particularly oppressive, it might even become “fa caldissimo!”
It’s important to emphasise that, too: here the stress falls on the third syllable: “fa-cal-DIII-ssi-mo!”
If that gets boring after a while, you could switch things up a bit, and say che caldo! or che caldo fa!
Other useful Italian words for talking (read: complaining) about Italy’s current weather conditions include canicola and addosso.
And once you’ve mastered these, there are some more colourful (and sometimes slightly crude) phrases for complaining about the heat which you can learn here.
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