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Italian Loro: Indirect Object Pronoun for ‘To Them’ (B2)
Italian loro indirect object means ‘to them’. It sits after the verb in formal writing (ho scritto loro), while gli replaces it in speech. A B2 guide with cheat-sheet.

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Italian Quelli Del: ‘The People At’ Pattern (B1)
Italian quelli del at B1: quelli del municipio (the town hall people), quella del bar, quelli di Como. The colloquial way Italians name a group by their place, with a Como condo dialogue.

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‘Di Cui’ in Italian: Including and Mentioned (B2)
Italian di cui explained: ‘including’ use (‘5 persone di cui 2 minorenni’), ‘mentioned’ use (‘il libro di cui ti parlavo’), B2 contrast with cui+other prep.

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Italian Singular vs English Plural Nouns (B1)
Italian singular plural mismatches: Pantaloni, occhiali, forbici, le uova, le braccia: a B1 guide to Italian nouns that are plural where English is singular, with chea…

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Italian Chiunque, Qualunque, Qualsiasi: Anyone & Any (B1)
Italian chiunque qualunque qualsiasi: Italian uses three words for any/anyone: chiunque, qualunque, qualsiasi. B1 guide covers position, subjunctive triggers, and qual…

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Italian Open vs Closed E and O Sounds: A2 Guide
Master italian open closed e o sounds: pesca vs pesca, botte vs botte, regional patterns and when written accents are required. A2 guide with minimal pairs.

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Italian Qualcun Altro and Qualcos’altro: A2 Guide
Italian qualcun altro, qualcos’altro and qualche altro explained: when to use each, the apostrophe rule, the feminine forms, dialogue and quiz. A2 guide.

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Italian Questi, Quegli: Literary Pronouns for He
Italian questi quegli: Italian questi and quegli explained: ‘the former, the latter’ literary pronouns. Formal Italian usage, contrast with costui colui, modern survival.

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