Free Italian Learning Materials
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Italian Stare + Gerundio: Sto Facendo, Stavo, Starà (A2/B1)
🔍 In short. The italian stare gerundio construction (sto facendo, stavo leggendo, starò partendo) is the Italian progressive form: it emphasises that an action …

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Italian Ci: C’è, Ci Vuole, Ci Penso (B1)
🔍 In short. The italian ci is one of the busiest little words in the language. It carries five jobs at once: it means …

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Italian Ne Pronoun: Functions and Uses (A2)
🔍 In short. The italian ne pronoun stands for di + something: di tortellini, di amici, di quella storia. It also works as the …

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Italian E vs Ed: The Eufonic ‘And’ Rule (A1)
🔍 In short. The story of italian e vs ed is really one rule: write ed only when the next word starts with the …

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Italian Counterfactuals Without Se: Venisse Domani (C1)
🔍 In short. Italian normally builds counterfactual sentences with se + subjunctive: se avessi saputo, sarei venuto (“if I had known, I would have …

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Italian Raddoppiamento: A Casa Becomes Akkasa (B2)
🔍 In short. Listen closely to an Italian saying vado a casa. You don’t hear “a casa” with a clean break. You hear “akkkasa”, …

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Italian La Idioms: Smetterla, Farcela, Cavarsela (B1)
🔍 In short. Italian has a family of idiomatic verbs that all carry a small, apparently meaningless feminine pronoun la stuck to the end: …

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Italian Né Né: How to Say ‘Neither Nor’ (A2)
🔍 In short. English uses “neither…nor” to coordinate two negative items. Italian né né does the same job: né mangia né beve means “he …

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