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 Purché, A Patto Che: Subjunctive Conditions (B2)
🔍 In short. Italian has a small family of conjunctions that mean “provided that” or “on condition that”, and they all share two features: …

Riccardo
Italian Must, Should, Ought To: Dovere Across Tenses (B1)
🔍 In short. English splits ‘must / should / ought to’ across three modals; Italian uses one verb, dovere, in different tenses. This B1 guide maps each English form to its Italian tense: devo, dovrei, ho dovuto, dovevo, deve aver, avrei dovuto, sarei dovuto.

Riccardo
Italian Quanto: How to Ask ‘How Much’ and ‘How Many’ (A1)
🔍 In short. Italian quanto covers ‘how much’ and ‘how many’, plus exclamations, duration, frequency, and price questions. This A1 guide explains the four forms (quanto/a/i/e), the adverb-adjective split, the elision rule (quant’è), and everyday patterns from quanto costa to ogni quanto.

Riccardo
Italian Ma, Però, Eppure: Adversative Conjunctions (A2)
🔍 In short. Italian uses several adversative conjunctions where English has ‘but’ and ‘however’. This A2 guide covers ma, però, eppure, invece, mentre, tuttavia, anzi — with position rules, register notes, and real-life examples.

Riccardo
Italian Dove and Quando: Asking ‘Where’ and ‘When’ (A1)
🔍 In short. Italian dove and quando are the question words for ‘where’ and ‘when’. This A1 guide covers dove vs dov’è, da dove vs di dove, quando vs a che ora, da quando for ‘since when’, and answers with prepositions of place and time.

Riccardo
Italian In vs A: How to Say ‘At’ and ‘In’ for Places (A2)
🔍 In short. Italian splits ‘at’ and ‘in’ across two prepositions: a for points (cities, fixed activities) and in for areas (countries, regions, big enclosed places). This A2 guide covers a Padova vs in Italia, the small-island exception, fixed phrases, shops in -ia, dentro, and distance patterns.

Riccardo
Italian Alcuni, Alcune: How to Say ‘Some’ or ‘A Few’ (A1)
🔍 In short. Italian alcuni alcune means ‘some’ or ‘a few’ in the plural, agreeing with the gender of the noun. The singular forms (alcun, alcuno, alcuna) live almost only in negative sentences. This A1 guide covers alcuni vs qualche, the di pattern, the rare singular, and common mistakes.

Riccardo
Italian Ogni, Ciascuno, Ognuno: ‘Each’ and ‘Every’ (A2)
🔍 In short. Italian has three words for ‘every’ and ‘each’: ogni, ciascuno, ognuno. This A2 guide explains adjective vs pronoun, the ciascun/ciascuno article rule, the numeral exception (ogni dieci giorni), and how to choose the right form every time.

Riccardo