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 Articles: When to Use Them and When to Drop (A2)
Italian articles confuse English speakers because the rules cut both ways: Italian uses the article where English drops it (il caffè, l’amore, mia madre is the rare exception), and drops it where English keeps it (vado a scuola, parlo italiano, ho fame). This A2 guide unpacks generic nouns, body parts, family members, geography, languages, days, fixed expressions, and the partitive zero article, all with examples from real Italian conversation.

Riccardo
Italian Quanto: All 8 Uses (Interrogative, Exclamative, Relative, C1)
🔍 In short. The Italian word italian quanto looks like a simple “how much/many” but covers far more ground. It works as interrogative adjective …

Riccardo
Italian Infinitive: Forms, Uses, Da + Infinito (B1)
🔍 In short. The italian infinitive is the base, unconjugated form of the verb: parlare, leggere, dormire. It has only two tenses, simple (amare) …

Riccardo
Italian -ché Conjunctions: Affinché, Purché, Benché, Poiché (B2)
🔍 In short. Italian -ché conjunctions are a morphological family of subordinators ending in stressed -ché: affinché (purpose, “so that”), purché (condition, “provided that”), …

Riccardo
Italian Pleonastic Non: Finché, A Meno Che, Per Poco
🔍 In short. Italian pleonastic non (non espletivo) is the small non that turns up in finché non, a meno che non, per poco …

Riccardo
Perfino, Persino, Addirittura: How to Say ‘Even’ in Italian
🔍 In short. English has one little word for piling on the surprising extra: even. Italian splits that job across several words, and choosing …

Riccardo
Italian Clothing Idioms: Nato con la Camicia & More
🔍 In short. Italian clothing idioms turn everyday garments into figurative language. Nato con la camicia (“born with the shirt on”) means born lucky; …

Riccardo
Italian You’re Welcome: Prego, Figurati, Di Niente
🔍 In short. The Italian you’re welcome is not one word but a small family: prego (the neutral default), di niente / di nulla …

Riccardo