Subscribe
Sign in
Home
Podcast
Notes
Chat
๐ฎ๐น Start here
๐ Short Stories
๐ฃ๏ธ Conversations
๐ Grammar
โ๏ธ Quiz
โ๏ธ Italiano in Viaggio
๐ก CEFR Level
Archive
Leaderboard
About
Latest
Top
๐ฎ๐น Italian Grammar Test โ August 2025
Hereโs a August 2025 Italian Grammar Test Edition with 25 multiple-choice questions. Each question has one correct answer out of four options (a, b, cโฆ
5 hrs ago
ย
โข
ย
Anna Italian Teacher
1
Share this post
Italiano Dinamico
๐ฎ๐น Italian Grammar Test โ August 2025
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
EP02S01. Roma ๐ฎ๐น: In metropolitana ๐
Listen now | Impara come affrontare le situazioni comuni allโarrivo in Italia: controllo passaporti, ritiro bagagli e prendere un taxi o un transfer.
6 hrs ago
ย
โข
ย
Anna Italian Teacher
1
Share this post
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
1:50
July 2025
30 minutes of conversations in Italian โ Love & Relationships (B1-B2) [SUB ITA/ENG]
Immerse yourself in 30 minutes of authentic Italian conversations all about love and relationships.
Jul 27
ย
โข
ย
Anna Italian Teacher
Share this post
Italiano Dinamico
30 minutes of conversations in Italian โ Love & Relationships (B1-B2) [SUB ITA/ENG]
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
30 Minutes of conversations in Italian โ Work & Office chat with subtitles
Practice your Italian with 30 minutes of authentic conversations set in the workplace!
Jul 21
ย
โข
ย
Anna Italian Teacher
1
Share this post
Italiano Dinamico
30 Minutes of conversations in Italian โ Work & Office chat with subtitles
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
The present progressive in Italian: โStareโ + Gerund
Letโs talk about one of the most useful, real-life tenses in Italian: the present progressive, also known as the "stare + gerund" form. If you've everโฆ
Jul 10
ย
โข
ย
Anna Italian Teacher
1
Share this post
Italiano Dinamico
The present progressive in Italian: โStareโ + Gerund
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
Meet the reflexive verbs: "Mi chiamo", "Ti alzi", and friends!
In English, we sometimes use reflexive pronouns, like โI wash myselfโ, but in Italian, they show up a lot more often. A reflexive verb is just a verbโฆ
Jul 5
ย
โข
ย
Anna Italian Teacher
1
Share this post
Italiano Dinamico
Meet the reflexive verbs: "Mi chiamo", "Ti alzi", and friends!
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
๐ฎ๐น Italian Grammar Test โ July 2025
Hereโs a June 2025 Italian Grammar Test Edition with 100 multiple-choice questions. Each question has one correct answer out of four options (a, b, cโฆ
Jul 1
ย
โข
ย
Anna Italian Teacher
1
Share this post
Italiano Dinamico
๐ฎ๐น Italian Grammar Test โ July 2025
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
June 2025
Learn Italian with TV series
If you're learning Italian and love watching TV, Lingopie is a platform worth trying. It lets you learn Italian through real TV series and moviesโฆ
Jun 29
ย
โข
ย
Anna Italian Teacher
1
Share this post
Italiano Dinamico
Learn Italian with TV series
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
Italian Grammar Mini-Lesson: "Qui, Qua, Lรฌ, Lร " โ What's the difference?
In everyday conversation, Italians often use qua and lร more often than qui and lรฌ, especially in informal speech.
Jun 29
ย
โข
ย
Anna Italian Teacher
Share this post
Italiano Dinamico
Italian Grammar Mini-Lesson: "Qui, Qua, Lรฌ, Lร " โ What's the difference?
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
Mastering "Bene", "Buono", "Bravo" and "Bello" in Italian conversation
If you're learning Italian, you've probably come across the words bene, buono, bravo, and bello. They all seem to mean something positive, good or niceโฆ
Jun 24
ย
โข
ย
Anna Italian Teacher
1
Share this post
Italiano Dinamico
Mastering "Bene", "Buono", "Bravo" and "Bello" in Italian conversation
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
False Friends in Italian
False friends ("falsi amici") are words that look or sound similar in English and Italian but have different meanings. These words can cause confusionโฆ
Jun 12
ย
โข
ย
Anna Italian Teacher
Share this post
Italiano Dinamico
False Friends in Italian
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
Why Gender Matters in Italian: How to Talk About People, Jobs, and More
In Italian, every noun has a grammatical gender, either masculine or feminine. This applies to people, objects, professions, and abstract conceptsโฆ
Jun 12
ย
โข
ย
Anna Italian Teacher
Share this post
Italiano Dinamico
Why Gender Matters in Italian: How to Talk About People, Jobs, and More
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
Share
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
This site requires JavaScript to run correctly. Please
turn on JavaScript
or unblock scripts