Can you explain the difference between “mi piace” and “mi piacciono” in Italian?

Last Updated: 01.07.2025 02:14

Can you explain the difference between “mi piace” and “mi piacciono” in Italian?

Thank you for your question.

La veste mi piace. - I like the dress. (The dress pleases me).

The endings of verbs indicate person and number in Italian and subject pronouns may therefore be omitted except when necessary for clearness or emphasis. In the case of “it" and “they" (referring to things) they are almost never used.

Why is watching a man and a woman have sex considered perverted? It's how we all got here, it's what we do, I say if you want to watch porn then carry on!

From discussion thus far you might already have understood that “mi piacciono" employs the third person plural form of the verb and translates as “they (understood) please me”, i.e. I like them.

Le scarpe mi piacciono. - I like the shoes. (The shoes please me.)

A couple of examples:

Did another parent ever tell you something about your child that you didn’t know?

The direct object pronoun “mi" is the object of the verb “piacere" (to please). Also known as conjunctive, such pronouns generally precede the verb that governs them. The expression “mi piace", employing third person singular format, translates literally to English as “it (understood) pleases me", i.e. I like it.

Contrary to English “I like it", “mi piace” is not a personal expression with “I" as the subject. In Italian the subject and object are transposed — “mi piace" literally means “it pleases me". The verb is third person singular.