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Italian Nonché, Peraltro, Viceversa: Formal Connectives (C1)

🔍 In short. Three formal Italian connectives that live in contracts, journalism, academic prose. Nonché closes a list with emphasis. Peraltro adds ‘however’ or ‘moreover’. Viceversa marks reciprocity or contrast. This C1 guide untangles each with position, punctuation, and register notes.
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Italian Ci Si Alza Presto: When Two Si Words Meet (B2)

🔍 In short. Italian has two different si: an impersonal si (one does, people do) and a reflexive si (oneself). When they meet in …
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Posso vs Riesco: Italian’s Two Ways to Say ‘I Can’ (A2)

🔍 In short. English uses one word. can. where Italian uses two: posso and riesco. They’re not interchangeable. Posso covers ability, permission, and possibility: …
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Italian Pronouns with Modal Verbs: Lo Devo Fare or Devo Farlo?

🔍 In short. Italian pronouns with modal verbs can go in two places, and both are correct. When you have dovere, potere, volere or …
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Italian Double Consonants: Why Nonno Sounds Different from Nono (A1)

🔍 In short. Italian double consonants are not a spelling decoration: they change pronunciation and very often meaning. The double letter signals that the …
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Italian Codesto: The Forgotten Demonstrative That Lives in Tuscany (C1)

🔍 In short. Italian codesto is the third demonstrative most Italian textbooks never mention. Standard Italian recognizes only questo (this, near me) and quello …
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Italian Mi Leggo un Libro: The Self-Treat Mi (B2)

🔍 In short. The Italian self-treat mi is one of those features that makes Italian sound Italian. When a speaker says mi mangio un’insalata, …
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Italian Each and Every: Ogni, Ognuno, Ciascuno (A2 Guide)

🔍 In short. Italian each and every are not interchangeable. Italian uses three different words where English uses just two. Ogni means “every” and …
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