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Italian Phrase

Il clima umido è fastidioso.

/il ˈkli.ma uˈmi.do ɛ fas.tiˈdjo.zo/
Meaning"The humid climate is annoying."
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Meaning

The humid climate is annoying. The speaker is expressing a mild complaint about the weather’s moisture level, which makes them feel uncomfortable.

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When to use

Use this sentence when you want to comment on uncomfortable, damp weather—especially in places where humidity makes the heat feel oppressive or the air feels sticky.

Grammar Breakdown

Ilclimaumidoèfastidioso

1

Definite article (Il)

Il is the masculine singular definite article used before consonant-starting nouns.

2

Noun (clima)

Clima is a masculine singular noun meaning 'climate' or 'weather'.

3

Adjective agreement (umido)

Umido is a masculine singular adjective that must agree in gender and number with clima.

4

Verb essere (è)

È is the third‑person singular present of essere, used to link subject and predicate.

5

Adjective (fastidioso)

Fastidioso is a masculine singular adjective meaning 'annoying' or 'bothersome'.

🗨In Conversation

A

Il clima umido è fastidioso.

The humid climate is annoying.

Sì, preferisco il clima secco.

Yes, I prefer dry weather.

B

Common Mistakes

  • Il clima umida è fastidioso.

    The adjective must agree with the masculine noun clima, so use umido, not umida.

  • Il clima umido è fastidiosi.

    Fastidiosi is plural; the subject is singular, so keep the singular form fastidioso.

Alternatives

  • Il tempo umido è fastidioso.

    The humid weather is annoying.

  • L'aria umida è fastidiosa.

    The humid air is annoying.

  • Il clima umido mi dà fastidio.

    The humid climate bothers me.

it

Cultural Tip

Italians love to talk about the weather, and using adjectives like fastidioso gives a polite, slightly informal tone. In the north, where humidity can be high in summer, you’ll hear similar complaints. Avoid overly strong words (e.g., disgustante) unless you really mean it.