Study Italian with Dante Learning

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 Andare Idioms: 18 Expressions Italians Use Daily

18 italian andare idioms English speakers should know at B1: a gonfie vele, a rotoli, in fumo, a genio, di lusso. Real examples, four traps, an aperitivo dialogue.
I fannulloni
Riccardo

Italian Proverbs: 30 Sayings and What They Mean

🔍 In short. Italian proverbs (proverbi) are short folk sentences that pack a rule of life into a few words: Chi dorme non piglia …
I fannulloni
Riccardo

How to Say WHAT in Italian: Che, Cosa, Che Cosa, Chi (B1)

How to say what in Italian: che, cosa, and che cosa are all correct and interchangeable. Plus chi for who, quale for which, quanto for how much, and more.
I fannulloni
Riccardo

Italian Subordinating Conjunctions: 10 Types + Mood

🔍 In short. Italian subordinating conjunctions (congiunzioni subordinative) are the words that hang one clause under another: perché, benché, affinché, quando, se, a meno …
I fannulloni
Riccardo

Italian Compound Prepositions: Del, Al, Dallo, Nella, Sui

🔍 In short. Italian compound prepositions (preposizioni articolate) are a simple preposition fused with a definite article. Five prepositions fuse systematically: di, a, da, …
I fannulloni
Riccardo

Italian Future Tense: Futuro Semplice and Anteriore

The Italian future tense in one pass: futuro semplice for upcoming events and for guesses about the present, futuro anteriore for an action completed before another future action and for guesses about the past. Paradigms, irregular stems, spelling tricks, and when Italians skip futuro for presente.
I fannulloni
Riccardo

Italian Modal Verbs: Dovere, Potere, Volere, Sapere (B1)

Master Italian modal verbs dovere, potere, volere, and sapere with clear conjugations, real examples, idioms, and a practice quiz. Complete A2 to B1 guide.
I fannulloni
Riccardo

Italian Reflexive Verbs: True, Reciprocal, Pronominal (B1)

At B1, italian reflexive verbs split into four overlapping families: true reflexives, reciprocals, apparent reflexives with a direct object, and intransitive pronominal verbs where the si is fossilised. This guide untangles all four with Verona-sartoria examples, past-participle rules, and the modal-verb auxiliary switch.
I fannulloni
Riccardo

Don`t copy text!