Talk:Neapolitan/501 Neapolitan verbs/avé

1st and 3rd person imperatives?
So, a few years a go, I ran across a book whose name has since vanished, that had a full scope of Neapolitan imperative conjugations for the verb avé. I duly noted this and went on, figuring I would work it out later. How can you have an imperative that is 1st or 3rd person? I have seen other Neapolitan imperatives for the plural 1st person, is this a quirk of the language and, if so, how does it work/what does it mean? This is the info I got back when:
 * {| class="wikitable"

Thanks.E. abu Filumena 23:52, 20 August 2005 (UTC)
 * align="left"|io
 * align="left"|aggio
 * align="left"|tu
 * align="left"|agge
 * align="left"|isso/essa
 * align="left"|aggia
 * align="left"|nuje
 * align="left"|avimmo, aggìamo
 * align="left"|vuje
 * align="left"|avite, aggiate
 * align="left"|isse/lloro
 * align="left"|aggiano
 * }
 * align="left"|avite, aggiate
 * align="left"|isse/lloro
 * align="left"|aggiano
 * }
 * }
 * Okay, so I understand (sort of) the 3rd person and the 1st person plural, as they work in Italian, asking people to do things or giving orders, but I still don't get the "I" form, internal dialogue?E. abu Filumena 01:46, 12 September 2005 (UTC)