Free Italian Learning Materials
All content on this page is freely accessible.
Interactive quizzes are available to friends who choose our Freemium option – a free registration with just one click.
Learning Italian is exciting and sometimes challenging.
We hope our exercises help you improve.
Have fun learning, and buono studio!
Search
Italian Si Passivante Plural: Si Vendono Case (B2)
Italian si passivante plural for B2: why si vendono case, si affittano biciclette and si parlano tre lingue need plural verb agreement, with passato prossimo and modal cases, set around the Certosa di Pavia and a Lomellina agriturismo.

Riccardo
Italian O, Oppure, Ovvero: Saying ‘Or’ (A1)
🔍 In short. The italian o oppure ovvero set is the family Italians use for English “or”. O is the everyday connector. Oppure is the slightly stronger cousin used to highlight a real choice. Ovvero in modern Italian means “that is, in other words”. The old form od is gone. A1 guide with a Lake Como dialogue.

Riccardo
Italian Numbers: Uno, Zero, Mille, Milione (A1)
Italian special numbers at A1: uno/un/una/un’, zero with plural noun, ventitré accent, mille becomes mila, milione di euro. Salerno fish market dialogue.

Riccardo
Italian Negation with Non: Simple Word Order (A1)
Italian negation non: A1 guide to the simple rule (non + verb), word order with object pronouns (non lo vedo), no vs non, and Ancona pescheria dialogue.

Riccardo
Italian Verbs of Asking: Chiedere di + Infinitive (B1)
Italian verbs asking di + infinitive at B1: chiedere, ordinare, pregare, dire, suggerire. Two object families, the di/che switch, set at a Belluno rifugio.

Riccardo
Italian Per vs Da + Infinitive: Purpose and Use (B1)
Italian per da infinitive: B1 guide to per for purpose (esco per comprare il pane), da for noun-use (qualcosa da bere, una storia da raccontare), tanto da consequence, troppo per. Ravenna mosaic workshop dialogue.

Riccardo
Italian Ne or Possessive: Ammirarne L’Intelligenza (B2)
Italian ne or possessive: B2 guide to when ammirarne l’intelligenza replaces ammirare la sua intelligenza, the reflexive block, and a Buonconsiglio dialogue.

Riccardo
Italian Idiomatic Ci: C’è, Ci Vuole, Ci Ho (A1)
Italian idiomatic ci at A1: c’è, ci sono, ci vuole, ci vogliono, ci ho and ce l’ho explained with a Verona market dialogue and quiz.

Riccardo