Fromandarsi +-ne. CompareFrenchs'en aller.
andàrsene (pronominal,first-person singular presentmenevàdo,first-person singular past historicmeneandài,past participleandàtosene,first-person singular futuremeneandrò,first-person singular subjunctivemenevàda,second-person singular imperativevàttene)(intransitive)
- togo away,leave
- Synonym:andare via
1300s–1310s,Dante Alighieri, “Canto VIII”, inInferno [Hell], lines109–111; republished asGiorgio Petrocchi, editor,La Commedia secondo l'antica vulgata [The Commedia according to the ancient vulgate], 2nd revised edition, Florence:publ.Le Lettere,1994:Cosìsen va, e quivi m’abbandona / lo dolce padre, e io rimagno in forse, / che sì e no nel capo mi tenciona.- Thus the sweet fathergoes away, abandoning me here; and I am left uncertain, withyes andno battling in my head.
- toleave, toget out of, toget away from [withdaor(uncommon)di‘somewhere’]
- Synonym:andare viada
- (euphemistic) topass away(die)
- Used to indicate a particular way of leaving or going
1300s–1310s,Dante Alighieri, “Canto VIII”, inInferno [Hell], lines28–30; republished asGiorgio Petrocchi, editor,La Commedia secondo l'antica vulgata [The Commedia according to the ancient vulgate], 2nd revised edition, Florence:publ.Le Lettere,1994:Tosto che ’l duca e io nel legno fui, / segandose ne va l’antica prora / de l’acqua più che non suol con altrui.- As soon as my guide and I were in the boat, the bowwent cutting through more water than what it usually does with others.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically:compound of the infinitiveandare withse (the conjunctive variant ofsi) andne.
1With syntactic gemination after the verb.