fatica
fatigue
noun fah-TEE-kah Less Common
Origin: from Latin 'fatigare' (to tire)
Also means
effort
Usage Note
Fatica is a false friend: it means tiredness or hard effort, not 'fatigue' as a uniform. It lives in the everyday phrase fare fatica a ('to struggle to'); the plural fatiche shifts -ca to -che to keep the hard 'k' sound.
Examples
"Faccio fatica a camminare."
Natural Translation
I struggle to walk.
Literal Translation
I-make fatigue to walk.
Related Words
Explore Italian by topic