ItalianNow Most Common Italian Verbs: The 10 That Unlock Speech Drill these 10 most common Italian verbs first and you unlock past tense, modals, and the progressive — a 7-day plan with every present-tense form to memorize. ItalianNow June 9, 2026 • 5 min read #italian-verbs #present-tense #beginner #conjugation
ItalianNow C'è vs Ci Sono: There Is/Are in Italian C'è for one thing, ci sono for many — that's the rule. Master Italian's there is/there are with c'era, ci sarà, è vs c'è, and non c'è nessuno. ItalianNow June 9, 2026 • 5 min read #ce-vs-ci-sono #esserci #grammar #beginner
ItalianNow Italian Dialects vs Standard Italian: A Guide Standard Italian works everywhere, so relax: this three-layer guide to Italian dialects vs standard Italian shows what to ignore and what to notice. ItalianNow June 9, 2026 • 6 min read #dialects #regional-italian #culture #beginner #listening
ItalianNow Italian Diminutives: -ino, -etto, -one Explained Italian diminutives like -ino, -etto, and -one signal size, affection, or contempt. Learn to read the feeling, dodge gender flips, and spot false diminutives. ItalianNow June 9, 2026 • 6 min read #diminutives #suffixes #vocabulary #noun-gender #beginner
ItalianNow You're Welcome in Italian: 8 Ways Beyond Prego You're welcome in Italian is more than prego: say figurati to friends, si figuri to strangers, di niente, non c'è di che, or grazie a te. Pick the right one. ItalianNow June 9, 2026 • 6 min read #prego #figurati #vocabulary #politeness #beginner
ItalianNow Buongiorno, Ciao or Salve? Italian Greetings Made Easy When in doubt, say salve and mirror the reply. Here's how to pick between buongiorno, buonasera, ciao and salve so your Italian greetings never sound rude. ItalianNow June 5, 2026 • 5 min read #greetings #ciao-vs-salve #buongiorno #beginner #formality
ItalianNow Avere Fame: Why Italians "Have" Hunger, Not "Are" In Italian you say Ho fame (I have hunger), never sono fame. Learn the avere + noun rule for fame, freddo, paura, age, and the sono caldo trap to avoid. ItalianNow June 5, 2026 • 5 min read #avere #verbs #common-mistakes #beginner
ItalianNow Essential Italian Travel Phrases (With Vorrei) Vorrei means I would like — the politest, most useful Italian travel phrase. Learn five reusable frames to order, ask prices, and find your way in Italy. ItalianNow June 5, 2026 • 5 min read #travel #vorrei #phrases #beginner #ordering
ItalianNow Essere vs Avere: Italian Past Tense Made Simple In the passato prossimo, use avere for most verbs and essere for movement, change, and reflexives — plus the agreement trap English speakers always miss. ItalianNow June 5, 2026 • 5 min read #passato-prossimo #essere-vs-avere #verbs #beginner
ItalianNow Italian Adjective Agreement & Placement Made Simple Italian adjectives agree in gender and number and usually sit after the noun. Master the -o/-a/-i/-e endings, the BAGS rule, and meaning-shifting pairs. ItalianNow June 5, 2026 • 5 min read #adjectives #grammar #agreement #word-order #beginner
ItalianNow Italian Articles: Il, Lo, La, I, Gli, Le Explained Italian has seven words for 'the' — il, lo, la, i, gli, le — but it's two questions, not seven cases. Master gender, sound, and the lo/gli rule fast. ItalianNow June 5, 2026 • 7 min read #definite-articles #grammar #beginner #nouns
ItalianNow Days & Months in Italian: A Beginner's Guide Days of the week in Italian are lowercase, all masculine except la domenica, and il lunedì means every Monday. Learn the days, months, dates, and seasons. ItalianNow June 5, 2026 • 4 min read #days-of-the-week #months #calendar #vocabulary #beginner
ItalianNow Italian False Friends: 20 Words That Trick You Italian false friends like preservativo, parenti, and caldo mean the opposite of what English speakers expect. Here are 20 ranked by how badly they bite. ItalianNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #false-friends #vocabulary #common-mistakes #beginner
ItalianNow Italian Hand Gestures: Meanings & When to Use Italian hand gestures decoded: what the pinched fingers, cheek screw, and chin flick mean, which ones are safe to use, and the one gesture to never make. ItalianNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #hand-gestures #culture #body-language #travel #beginner
ItalianNow Italian Noun Gender: Rules, Endings & Exceptions Italian noun gender decoded: -o is usually masculine, -a feminine, but -zione and -tà are feminine, -ore and -ma masculine. Plus the trap words to memorize. ItalianNow June 5, 2026 • 5 min read #noun-gender #grammar #nouns #beginner
ItalianNow Italian Prepositions: A, In, Di, Da, Su Made Simple Cities take a, countries take in, origin is di, agents are da. Master the five Italian prepositions a, in, di, da, su and their contractions fast. ItalianNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #prepositions #grammar #beginner #preposizioni-articolate
ItalianNow Italian Numbers 1 to 100: Count Like a Local Learn Italian numbers 1 to 100 by mastering 0-20, the tens, and 3 spelling rules so you can generate any number from ventuno to novantanove on demand. ItalianNow June 5, 2026 • 5 min read #numbers #vocabulary #beginner #pronunciation
ItalianNow Italian Present Tense: -are, -ere, -ire Verbs Conjugate Italian present-tense verbs fast: one color-coded chart for -are, -ere, and -ire endings, plus the sneaky -isc- group most guides bury. ItalianNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #verbs #present-tense #conjugation #isc-verbs #beginner
ItalianNow Italian Question Words: Chi, Cosa, Dove, Quando & More Master Italian question words: chi, cosa, dove, quando, perché, come, quanto and quale. A usage-first guide that finally sorts che vs cosa vs quale. ItalianNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #question-words #interrogatives #beginner #vocabulary
ItalianNow Italian Restaurant Etiquette: Mistakes to Avoid Skip the cappuccino after dinner, never put parmesan on fish, and learn the exact Italian phrases to order gracefully and avoid looking like a tourist. ItalianNow June 5, 2026 • 5 min read #dining-etiquette #restaurant-phrases #food-culture #travel #beginner
ItalianNow Italian Reflexive Verbs: Mi Chiamo, Mi Alzo & More Italian reflexive verbs use mi, ti, si, ci, vi, si — learn the pronouns, conjugate chiamarsi and alzarsi, master your daily routine, and the modal-verb rule. ItalianNow June 5, 2026 • 5 min read #reflexive-verbs #verbs #daily-routine #beginner #pronouns
ItalianNow Mi Piace vs Mi Piacciono: How to Say 'I Like' Use mi piace for one thing and mi piacciono for many — because in Italian the thing you like is the subject. The full rule, pronouns, and past tense. ItalianNow June 5, 2026 • 5 min read #piacere #verbs #pronouns #beginner
ItalianNow How to Order Coffee in Italy Like a Local Order coffee in Italy like a local: say un caffè (not espresso), pay at the cassa first, drink al banco, and skip the latte trap. Phrases inside. ItalianNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #italian-coffee #travel-italian #ordering #culture #beginner
ItalianNow Tu vs Lei: Formal & Informal "You" in Italian When in doubt, use Lei. Here's exactly when to use tu vs Lei in Italian — the who-to-use-with map, the verb and possessive shifts, and how to switch politely. ItalianNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #tu-vs-lei #formal-italian #politeness #beginner
ItalianNow Ti Amo vs Ti Voglio Bene: I Love You in Italian Ti amo is romantic love; ti voglio bene is tender affection for family and close friends. Here's exactly who to say each phrase to in Italian. ItalianNow June 5, 2026 • 5 min read #ti-amo #ti-voglio-bene #love-phrases #terms-of-endearment #beginner