Free Italian Learning Materials
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Italian Dunque, Quindi, Perciò: ‘So’ and ‘Therefore’ (A2)
Italian dunque, quindi, perciò, allora, pertanto at A2: the five Italian words for ‘so’ and ‘therefore’, sorted by register, with a Colli tortonesi cantina dialogue and a Timorasso tasting.

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Italian Il Più Alto Del Mondo: Relative Superlative (A2)
🔍 In short. The italian relative superlative picks the most or least of a group: il più alto del mondo, la più bella di tutte, il migliore della classe. A2 guide to article + più/meno + adjective + di, with traps, irregular forms, and a Civitavecchia port dialogue.

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Italian Così and Tale: ‘Like This’, ‘Such’ (B1)
Italian così tale at B1: così for manner (fanno così, è andata così), tale for kind (una cosa tale, tali sostanze), plus talmente, in tal modo, simile, del genere, siffatto. Mozzarella di bufala dialogue in the agro pontino near Latina.

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Italian A Me Mi Piace: Doubled Pronoun Pattern (B1)
🔍 In short. Italian a me mi piace is the doubled-pronoun construction every textbook flags as wrong and every Italian uses anyway. Manzoni wrote it, Vasco Rossi sings it, Tuscans default to it. B1 register guide with a Carrara marble workshop dialogue.

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Italian Cioè, Vale a Dire, Infatti: Saying ‘I Mean’ (A2)
Italian cioè, vale a dire, infatti and ossia are the small connector words Italians use to clarify or confirm what they just said. A2 guide with examples from a Casale Monferrato wine cellar, cheat sheet, dialogue and quiz.

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Italian Vostra Eminenza, Vostra Santità: Living Titles (C1)
🔍 In short. Italian vostra eminenza for cardinals, Vostra Santità for the Pope, Vostra Maestà for monarchs, Vostra Eccellenza for bishops, ambassadors, judges, Ill.mo and Chiar.mo on envelopes. C1 working catalogue of address forms still in active 2026 use.

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Italian L’Ho Preso, Il Caffè: Speech-Style End-Shift (C1)
🔍 In short. Italian has a quiet trick English barely uses: take the object, push it to the end, echo it earlier with a pronoun. L’ho preso, il caffè. Non lo capisco, suo fratello. C1 guide to end-shift word order with Marisol and Gerardo at the Scrovegni in Padova.

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Italian Non in Exclamations: Non è Bello? (B2)
Italian non in exclamations at B2: Non è bello?, Cosa non darei!, Chi non vorrebbe!, the tags no?/vero?/non è vero?/nevvero?, and the agreement check non ti pare?. Siena Palio dialogue with Stella and Lucio.

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