Italian Word of the Day: Soqquadro (disarray / confusion / mess)

Today’s Italian word is soqquadro (masculine, plural: soqquadri), which can translate in a number of ways in English including upside-down, disarray, mess, shambles, cluttered and topsy-turvy, just to name a few!

/soq·quà·dro/
italian word soqquadro

It comes from the expression sotto quadro (lit. under square), which was used by builders to refer to off-kilter or crooked structural elements that can cause a structure to collapse, or walls that aren’t at right angles.

A fun little fact you may not have known is that it is the only word in the Italian language, besides the near-obsolete biqquadro / beqquadro, written with two consecutive Qs!

Today it is used almost exclusively in the expression mettere a soqquadro (“to turn everything upside-down”), though you may also hear essere a soqquadro (“to be in a mess”).

I ladri hanno messo a soqquadro la casa.

The thieves turned the house upside down.


In rare cases, a soqquadro may follow nouns to describe their state of disarray, such as una stanza a soqquadro (a room in disarray).

Surprised man standing in messy room with floor full of clothes

Soqquadro may not be the most useful Italian word you’ll come across, but who ever said all words had to be useful, right?


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