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 A vs Di vs Da: The 3 Trickiest Prepositions (A2)
Italian a, di, da side by side at A2: vado a Verona, sono di Verona, vengo da Verona. Four confusion zones (cities, time, people, descriptions) with a 12-row comparison table and a Greta and Lorenzo dialogue planning a weekend in Verona.

Riccardo
Italian Quaggiù, Lassù, Laggiù: Distance Place Words (A2)
🔍 In short. The italian quaggiù lassù family covers distance and direction in one word: quaggiù (down here), lassù (up there), laggiù (down there), quassù (up here), plus lì vicino and qua attorno for vaguer nearby. A2 guide with a baita dialogue between Bergamo and Trento.

Riccardo
Italian Stesso vs Uguale: ‘Same’ or ‘Equal’? (A2)
🔍 In short. The pair stesso vs uguale is one of those A2 puzzles where English has one word and Italian has two. They …

Riccardo
Italian Vicino A, Accanto A, Presso: Saying ‘Next To’ (A2)
Italian has a family of longer location words: vicino a (near), accanto a (next to), a fianco di (alongside), presso (at, c/o), davanti a, dietro a, di fronte a. A2 guide with a Palermo address-directions dialogue, comparison table, and quiz.

Riccardo
Italian Qui Sopra, Lì Sotto: Compound Place Adverbs (B1)
🔍 In short. Italian compound place adverbs like qui sopra, lì sotto, lì dentro and là vicino are two-word place expressions that point to a precise spot in space. The first word anchors near or far from the speaker; the second adds the direction.

Riccardo
Italian Quando Si È Giovani: Why the Adjective Goes Plural with Si (B2)
Why does Italian say quando si è giovani in the plural when the verb is singular? B2 guide to the italian si impersonal plural adjective rule, with predicate nouns, compound participle agreement, and a side-by-side comparison with si passivante, set at a Perugia caffè.

Riccardo
Italian A Due A Due, Tre Per Ciascuno: Sharing Out Patterns (B1)
Italian sharing-out patterns at B1: a due a due, tre per ciascuno, a uno a uno, uno alla volta, ciascuno vs ogni, a turno, un giorno si un giorno no. Field-trip dialogue in Lecce.

Riccardo
Italian Adjective Position: La Povera Donna vs La Donna Povera (B1)
Italian adjective position changes meaning at B1: la povera donna (pity) vs la donna povera (no money), grande uomo vs uomo grande, vecchio amico vs amico vecchio. Ten pairs, exceptions, and a Mantova dialogue with Lorenzo and Chiara.

Riccardo