Significado
Agreeing with someone.
Contexto cultural
Italians often use hand gestures when saying 'Hai ragione'. A common one is a single firm nod combined with an open palm facing upward, as if presenting the truth. In Rome, the phrase often becomes 'C'hai ragione' (with the 'ci' particle). It's used very frequently, sometimes even as a filler word to show you are listening. In the South, 'Hai ragione' can sometimes be used to politely end a conversation with someone who is talking too much. It's a way to say 'I agree, now let's move on.' In a hierarchy, a subordinate will almost always use 'Ha ragione' to a boss. It is a safe way to show alignment without being 'leccapiedi' (a bootlicker).
The 'H' is Silent
Never pronounce the 'h' in 'hai'. It's purely a visual marker to distinguish it from 'ai' (to the).
Avoid 'Sei'
If you say 'Tu sei ragione', Italians will understand you, but it sounds very foreign. Stick to 'hai'.
Significado
Agreeing with someone.
The 'H' is Silent
Never pronounce the 'h' in 'hai'. It's purely a visual marker to distinguish it from 'ai' (to the).
Avoid 'Sei'
If you say 'Tu sei ragione', Italians will understand you, but it sounds very foreign. Stick to 'hai'.
Add 'Tu' for Emphasis
Saying 'Hai ragione TU' (with emphasis on 'tu') is a great way to admit you were wrong after an argument.
The Sarcastic Trap
Be careful with your tone. A flat 'Sì, hai ragione' can sound like 'Yeah, whatever you say,' which is quite rude.
Teste-se
Choose the correct verb to complete the phrase: 'Tu ___ ragione.'
Tu ___ ragione.
In Italian, you 'have' (avere) reason, you don't 'are' (essere) reason.
Fill in the blank with the correct formal form of the verb 'avere'.
Signora Bianchi, Lei ___ ragione, il treno è in ritardo.
When speaking formally (Lei), the verb 'avere' becomes 'ha'.
Match the phrase to the level of emphasis.
Which phrase means 'You are absolutely right'?
'Perfettamente' adds the highest level of agreement.
Complete the dialogue.
A: 'Parigi è la città più bella del mondo.' B: 'Sì, ___ ragione, è stupenda!'
B is agreeing with A (the person they are talking to), so 'hai' is correct.
🎉 Pontuação: /4
Recursos visuais
English vs Italian Logic
Ways to Agree
Informal
- • Hai ragione
- • C'hai ragione
- • Hai ragione da vendere
Formal
- • Ha ragione
- • Concordo
- • È esattamente come dice Lei
Banco de exercicios
4 exerciciosTu ___ ragione.
In Italian, you 'have' (avere) reason, you don't 'are' (essere) reason.
Signora Bianchi, Lei ___ ragione, il treno è in ritardo.
When speaking formally (Lei), the verb 'avere' becomes 'ha'.
Which phrase means 'You are absolutely right'?
'Perfettamente' adds the highest level of agreement.
A: 'Parigi è la città più bella del mondo.' B: 'Sì, ___ ragione, è stupenda!'
B is agreeing with A (the person they are talking to), so 'hai' is correct.
🎉 Pontuação: /4
Perguntas frequentes
12 perguntasYes, but it's more natural to just say 'Hai ragione'. Adding 'Tu' makes it more emphatic.
No, it's informal. Use 'Ha ragione' for formal situations.
Use 'Ho ragione'.
The opposite is 'Hai torto' (You are wrong).
It's better to use 'Esatto' or 'È giusto' for math.
It's a linguistic tradition from Latin where logic was seen as something you possess.
It's very common in spoken, informal Italian (especially in Rome), but avoid it in writing.
Use the imperfect tense: 'Avevi ragione'.
It's better to say 'Hai perfettamente ragione' or 'Hai proprio ragione'.
No, it also means 'reason' or 'logic' in other contexts.
Yes, if you use 'Hai'. Use 'Ha ragione, professore' to be polite.
It means you are 'so right you could sell some of your rightness'. It's a very strong agreement.
Frases relacionadas
Essere d'accordo
synonymTo be in agreement
Hai torto
contrastYou are wrong
Esatto
similarExactly
Proprio così
similarJust like that / Exactly
Hai ragione da vendere
specialized formYou are extremely right