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 Passive Voice: Essere, Venire, Andare and the SI Passivante
Italian passive voice covered: essere + past participle, venire for dynamic feel, andare for obligation, si passivante for impersonal. Five traps and a building-site dialogue.

Riccardo
Trova i sinonimi e i contrari di un aggettivo – Quiz
Oggi faremo un semplice esercizio di vocabolario: trovare i sinonimi e i contrari di un aggettivo livello – intermedio Lo scopo dell’esercizio è piuttosto …

Riccardo
Italian Past Participle: Forms, Agreement, and Clausal Uses
In short: The Italian past participle (participio passato) does four jobs. It builds every compound tense from passato prossimo to condizionale passato, it agrees …

Riccardo
Italian Pronominal Verbs: Farcela, Fregarsene, Andarsene (B1/B2)
TL;DR. Italian pronominal verbs fuse a base verb with clitic pronouns (la, ne, ci, si) to create idiomatic meanings. Farcela = succeed, fregarsene = …

Riccardo
Italian Conditional (Condizionale): Forms, Uses, Future-in-the-Past
The Italian conditional (condizionale) does five jobs with one tense family: polite requests, softened opinions, counterfactual wishes, hearsay reporting, and a peculiar job called …

Riccardo
Le frasi causali – Esempi audio
Le frasi causali indicano la causa, il motivo dell’azione descritta nella frase principale Visto che non hai voglia di uscire, stasera rimarremo a casa. …

Riccardo
Italian Concessive Clauses: Sebbene, Benché, Nonostante and Anche Se Explained
Italian has at least eight ways to say “although.” Pick the wrong one and you sound either stiffly bookish or accidentally hypothetical. Pick the …

Riccardo