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Italian Relative Pronouns: Che, Cui, Il Quale, Whose (B1)

🔍 In short. The italian relative pronouns are the small words that link two sentences into one: che, cui, il quale, il cui, il …
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Italian Causative: Fare and Lasciare + Infinitive

The Italian causative: fare and lasciare plus an infinitive to say someone has, makes, gets or lets something done. Patterns, a vs da, farsi, pronouns, traps.
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Italian Passato Prossimo: Forms, Auxiliary, Agreement (A2)

🔍 In short. The italian passato prossimo is the everyday past tense for completed actions: ho mangiato, sono andato, ci siamo divertiti. It is …
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Italian Future of Probability, Supposition and More

The Italian future does more than predict: it guesses (saranno le otto), concedes, reports from the past and follows quando. The B2 to C1 discourse uses.
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Italian Formal Lei: When to Switch Register (B1)

🔍 In short. The italian formal Lei is the polite address used with strangers, professionals, customers, older people. Grammatically Lei is third person singular …
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Italian Adjective Position: Buon Amico or Amico Buono

🔍 In short. Italian adjective position is not free decoration: it carries meaning. The default is after the noun (una casa grande), which simply …
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Italian Passato Prossimo vs Imperfetto: When to Use Each

🔍 In short. Italian passato prossimo vs imperfetto is the first real fork English speakers hit in the past tense. Both can translate as …
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Italian Nouns: 7 Rules for Gender and Plurals (A2-B1)

🔍 In short. Italian nouns carry two grammatical tags that drive the rest of the sentence: gender (masculine or feminine) and number (singular or …
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