
Learn how to greet in Italian with buongiorno, buon pomeriggio, buonasera, and use ciao for greetings at any time of day.
Explore how to talk about music and instruments in Italian, including musica, cantante, melodia, cantassone, and basic pronunciation cues for stress and instrument names.
Learn to introduce yourself in modern Italian using phrases like mi chiamo, sono americano, and piacere di conoscerti, with basic greetings such as buongiorno and ciao.
Engage with exercise 6 and its answer key in the most complete Italian course, reinforcing practice across levels from A1 to C2 and supporting self-check in learning Italian.
Explore italian ways to say you're welcome—non c'è di che, prego, di nulla, niente, and si figuri—plus notes on pronunciation, like prego's e-sound and niente stress on nien.
Listen and write in Italian through a dictation of everyday words like camminare, cinema, facile, difficile, felice, luna, macchina, comunicazione. Practice including nocere, onnisciente, piccolo, qualità, radio, esempio, vecchio, exantina.
Master Italian greetings by using buon giorno for good morning, buon pomeriggio for good afternoon, and buona sera for good evening, plus ciao as a universal greeting anytime.
Practice the most common Italian words through targeted exercises. Review the answer key to reinforce essential vocabulary.
Explore the most common Italian words level A1, including automobili (car), seggia (chair), and giorno (day), with pronunciation guidance on syllables and meanings.
Learn the most common Italian words, including inglese (english), andare (to go), casa (house), and cucina (kitchen), while practicing stress patterns, choosing s or z for inglese, and pronouncing r.
Explore the most common Italian words, their meanings and pronunciations, including sogrella meaning sister, professore and docente for professor, acqua and qua, and a closing grazie mille.
Master the congiuntivo presente of first-conjugation verbs by forming che clauses with io, tu, lui, noi, voi, loro endings: impari, impariamo, impariate, imparino.
Engage in Italian exercises from the most complete course spanning A1 to C2 levels to build foundational skills.
Engage in Italian exercise drills focused on the pronoun you within a complete course spanning A1 to C2 levels.
Master congiuntivo imperfetto for regular -are verbs by repeating the endings; use imparare as an example with forms: che io imparassi, che noi imparassimo, che loro imparassero.
Lead you through Italian exercises across levels A1 to C2, inspired by the Esercizio lecture and designed to engage you.
Explore the indicativo passato remoto of the first conjugation verbs. Learn endings such as ai and forms like imparò, imparamo, imparaste, and impararono.
Engage in you-focused exercise prompts in this Italian course. Practice responding to you-centered cues effectively.
Engage in a focused esercizio practice for you, reinforcing Italian fundamentals across the course levels from A1 to C2.
Engage in Italian exercises centered on you, using the esercizio approach to steady language practice throughout the most complete Italian course.
Learn a practical methodology to form Italian words and build vocabulary, applying grave accents, stress placement, and targeted letter changes to speak and write easily.
Learn how to form and pronounce common Italian words to speak and write easily, using curiosita and capacita as examples and exploring pronunciation cues like ci and ciao.
Practice exercises with an answer key for the most complete Italian course spanning A1 to C2, reinforcing fundamentals for learners through focused practice.
Learn a methodology to form Italian words, using endings like -ty to -ta with examples such as sanita and probabilita, to speak and write easily.
Explore exercise content and its answer key to reinforce Italian learning across A1 to C2 levels, supporting steady practice and self-check in the course.
Learn how to pronounce Italian words by applying last-syllable stress and accents, turning longevity into longevità, sonority into sonorì, and obesity into obesità.
Practice Italian with this exercise and answer key 2, aligned with the most complete Italian course from A1 to C2.
Advance your Italian skills with exercise 3 and its answer key within the most complete Italian course spanning levels A1 to C2.
Learn to name colors in Italian and master gender and plural forms. Explore marrone, verity, rosso/rossa/rossi, and bianco/bianca with plurals like bianchi.
Engage with you through exercise with answer key 2, as part of the most complete Italian course.
Learn how to ask for information in Italian with polite phrases like per favore, greetings such as buongiorno and ciao, and correct word order for places like l'Università di Bologna.
Learn numbers in Italian from zero to ten, with pronunciation cues for each term (zero, uno, due, tre, quattro, cinque, sei, sette, otto, nove, gette).
Learn to count from ten to twenty in Italian, including pronunciations for each number such as diciassette, diciotto, dicianove, and venti, with notes on silent letters and sound patterns.
Learn to count in Italian from twenty to thirty, forming 21–29 by adding 1–9 to 20, and note two ways to say 30. Apply elision rules to avoid vowel clashes.
Practice Italian exercises with an answer key across A1, A2, B1, B2, C1, C2 levels to reinforce learning and self-check understanding.
Master Italian numbers from 40 to 50 through guided practice and repetition, learning to say 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, and 50.
Practice exercises with an answer key to reinforce Italian learning across levels A1 to C2.
Engage with Italian practice exercises and an answer key across levels A1 to C2, reinforcing learning across all course stages.
Practice an Italian exercise with an answer key, aligned with levels A1 to C2 in the most complete Italian course.
Learn how to count from 90 to 100 in Italian, including novanta, novantuno, novantadue, novantatre, novantaquattro, novantacinque, novantasei, novantasette, novantotto, novantanove, and cento, noting vowel rules.
Practice italian with exercises and answer keys from the complete course, spanning levels a1 to c2.
Engage you in Italian through the esercizio exercise spanning the complete course from A1 to C2.
Learn essential Italian travel vocabulary, including viaggiare and viaggio, passport passaporto, visa visto, suitcase valigia, airport aeroporto, flight volo, airplane aereo, and bagaglio a mano, with pronunciation cues.
Practice esercizio exercises across italian levels A1 to C2 within the most complete italian course.
Engage in esercizio drills to practice Italian across levels A1 to C2, reinforcing core language skills through focused, level-appropriate practice.
Learn sea animal names in Italian and practice pronunciation rules, including squalo with qu, pesce as peche, balena, and granchio with ke for ch.
Explore Italian bird vocabulary including gallo, aquila, gallina, piccioni, and papagallo, plus the uccello to uccelli plural and pronunciation cues.
Explore road transport vocabulary in English and Italian, including traffic light and semaphore, car and automobile, camion (truck), patente (driver's license), cintura (seatbelt), rotunda (roundabout), parking, and intersection.
Explore the most complete Italian course from A1 to C2, using esercizio focused lessons that center you and guide your language progress.
Explore how to say fruits in italian, including plural frutti and singular frutto, and pronunciations for mango, avocado, mila, limone, papaya, and ananas.
Learn to name drinks in Italian, from bevanda to bevandi, with stress on van and paroxysmal words and grave accent rules for cafe and te.
Practice Italian through regular exercises designed for you, spanning from A1 to C2 levels, and build foundational skills with targeted repetition.
Explore practice exercises with an answer key in the most complete Italian course, covering levels A1 to C2. Review answers to reinforce learning and boost confidence in Italian skills.
Learn the most common Italian words: belt as cintura with stress on tu, believe as cretere with cre stress, and chemistry as chimica with chi stress, plus CH pronunciation guidance.
learn the most common a2 italian words, like cuoco for cook and facoltà (college), with pronunciation tips and examples, including competizione and the expression complimenti.
Master counting from 120 to 140 in Italian, with guided pronunciation of each number and exploration of two different ways to say thirty.
Practice focusing on the word you through a repeating exercise with a provided answer key to reinforce recognition and usage in the Italian course.
Master how to say numbers from 140 to 160 in Italian, using cento quaranta to cento sessanta with appended units, such as cento cinquantuno and cento cinquantanove.
Practice Italian numbers from 160 to 180 for learners across levels A1 to C2 within the most complete Italian course.
Practice exercise with an answer key for the most complete Italian course spanning levels A1 to C2.
Learn how to count from 180 to 200 in Italian, using cento tanta for 180, cento novanta for 190, and due cento for 200.
practice exercises with an answer key for the most complete Italian course, featuring repeated you prompts to reinforce language patterns.
Practice Italian through an exercise with an answer key, spanning levels from A1 to C2, reinforcing learning with guided solutions.
Learn how to say numbers from 280 to 300 in Italian, practice counting from 1 to 9, and gain motivation to master Italian.
Learn to count in Italian from 300 to 330 with guided pronunciation and practice, including 301, 302, 310, 320, and 321 to 330.
Practice essential Italian exercises with an answer key to reinforce learning across levels A1 to C2. Explore a comprehensive Italian course designed to guide learners from beginner to advanced.
Learn to count numbers from 330 to 360 in Italian, counting sequences like 1–9, 100, 130, 181–189, 840, 860, 340, and combine them to form 3060.
Practice Italian with exercises and an answer key in the most complete Italian course from A1 to C2.
Master Italian numbers from 430 to 460, including quattrocento for 400, and learn how tens and units are combined to form one fluent counting system.
Engage with Italian exercises and verify solutions using the exercise with answer key, spanning levels from A1 to C2 in this comprehensive Italian course.
Practice Italian with an exercise with answer key from the most complete Italian course levels a1 to c2, enabling practical self-assessment and steady progress.
Engage with a practical Italian exercise featuring an answer key, guiding you through level-based practice from A1 to C2 in this comprehensive course.
Practice Italian with an exercise and its answer key across levels. This course covers a complete Italian program from A1 to C2.
Master the most common Italian words for c1 level—abandonare, conquistare, grande, personale—with pronunciation and stress guidance. Improve your recall and pronunciation by practicing these terms.
Engage in Italian practice exercises with a detailed answer key to build proficiency across A1 to C2 levels.
Learn the most common Italian words for level C1, including tattica, autorite zare, and cacophonia, with pronunciation tips on stress and pitch.
Master essential Italian fundamentals across A1 to C2 levels. Practice with an exercise that includes an answer key to reinforce learning.
Conjugate the present tense of Italian verbs camminare and imparare, using io imparo, tu impari, noi impariamo, voi imparate, and loro imparando, with pronunciation tips for camminare.
Practice italian exercises with an answer key, spanning a1 to c2, to reinforce skills and enable self-check across the complete course.
Engage in an exercise with an answer key from the most complete Italian course, spanning A1 to C2, to reinforce fundamentals and assess progress.
Form the congiuntivo imperfetto by deleting are and ere, adding -assi, and forming verbs like io imparassi, tu imparassi, lui/lei imparasse, noi imparassimo, voi imparaste, loro imparassero.
Master the indicativo imperfetto by removing -are and adding -av- across the verb stem, then conjugate like imparavi, imparava, imparavamo for verbs such as camminare.
Engage with Italian practice exercises complete with an answer key, aligned with the full Italian course levels A1 through C2.
Learn how to conjugate Italian second-conjugation verbs in the present tense, focusing on -ere verbs like leggere, and practice the io, tu, lui/lei, noi, voi, loro forms.
Practice italian with an exercise that includes an answer key, spanning from a1 to c2 levels in a comprehensive course designed for practical language mastery.
Learn congiuntivo presente by deleting the final o in the present tense and adding che with endings like legga, leggiamo, leggiate, leggano.
Practice the futuro anteriore with focused exercises to master the future perfect in Italian within this complete course.
Tackle congiuntivo passato through targeted exercises in this comprehensive Italian course, building grammar mastery across levels from a1 to c2.
Learn to conjugate any Italian verb in congiuntivo presente by using che plus the subject forms, then add -a endings, as in CHE IO SINTA and CHE NOI SINTIAMO.
learn how to conjugate verbs of the third conjugation in the congiuntivo imperfetto, replacing endings with ss e or ss i to form io, tu, lui, noi, voi, loro forms.
Practice through an esercizio in this italian course, focusing on you. Builds familiarity with you across the complete italian levels A1 to C2.
Dear Friend,
Did you know that Italian is one of the easiest languages to learn with my methodology?
You can continue using the same unproductive methodology and continue getting the same results or you can take advantage of this opportunity to master Italian. The choice is yours.
Albert Einstein said, “Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.”
Come here. In this course, I am going to teach you the right way to learn Italian.
Naysayers will say that you cannot, but I say to you that you can and you will.
It's a course without any nonsense, no beating around the bush. Have you been learning Italian for a long time? Do you think you're terrible at Italian? In reality, you're not terrible at Italian, but you're terrible at Italian because you lack a pragmatic and appropriate methodology. It's not your fault. Got it?
In the complete Italian course: A1, A2, B1, B2, C1, C2, you will learn several practical concepts that you can use in everyday conversations, such as:
1) Macchina methodology;
2) Words and sentences most commonly used in modern Italian;
3) Parts of the body , in practice;
4) Correct pronunciation of Italian words;
5) Reading and writing in Italian;
6) The correct way to introduce yourself in Italian;
7) Travel;
8) The Italian alphabet with correct pronunciations;
9) Exercises to practice;
10) Location of the stress ;
11) Family members in Italian;
12) Numbers, with interesting contents, etc.
To facilitate your learning, I have included written material. I know that some people learn better by reading. Some people learn better by writing. Others learn better by listening.
Now, to take advantage of this valuable content, you will need to do your part as well: dedication and practice. You need to practice to speak Italian. Don't be afraid to make mistakes. Mistakes are normal. But it's not normal when you don't want to speak to avoid mistakes. When you avoid mistakes, you automatically avoid fluency. You won't become fluent in Italian overnight. It takes time. Are you read? Here we go !
Grazie mille !
Abbraccio!