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 Un Tale: A Certain Somebody, Such a (B1)
Italian un tale wears four hats: pronoun for some guy, a certain Lorenzo, such a noun, and the bureaucratic il tal dei tali. A B1 guide with a Treviso dialogue.

Riccardo
Italian Articles with Cities and Countries: A2 Guide
Italian articles cities: Italian articles with cities and countries: bare cities, articles for countries, special cases like L’Aquila and Il Cairo. A2 guide with Ferra…

Riccardo
Italian Uno as a Pronoun: ‘One’ and ‘Somebody’ (A2)
Italian uno pronoun: Italian uno is also a pronoun: ne ho uno (one of them), uno mi ha detto (somebody), uno rosso (a red one). A2 guide with dialogue at the cartoleria.

Riccardo
Italian ‘Lo Credevo Innocente’: Verb + Adjective (B2)
Italian credere considerare adjective: Italian Lo credevo innocente: the B2 compact construction with credere, considerare, ritenere, trovare plus object plus adjectiv…

Riccardo
Italian Conversational Word Order: Lo Prendo Un Caffè (B2)
Italian conversational word order: Right-shifted Italian word order (Lo prendo, un caffè) explained: how natives use conversational right-dislocation in everyday speec…

Riccardo
Italian Pertanto, Dunque, Ergo: Drawing Conclusions (C1)
How to use pertanto, dunque, ergo, quindi and perciò in Italian. A C1 guide to register, position and style for academic, legal and journalistic writing.

Riccardo
Italian Eppure: ‘And Yet’ Connective Explained (C1)
Italian eppure means ‘and yet’: a C1 adversative connective. Learn how it differs from ma, però, tuttavia, with a Lecco enoteca dialogue and quiz.

Riccardo
Italian Newspaper Language: How Journalese Sounds (C1)
Italian newspaper language for C1 readers: nominalization, passive si, narrative imperfect, sigle (PM, BCE), and the verbs journalists use instead of dire.

Riccardo