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Italiano for English speakers

  1. Flashcards
  2. What is Italian?
  3. Core Vocabulary
  4. Essential Grammar
  5. Pronunciation
  6. Common Mistakes
  7. Learning Resources
  8. Culture & Context
  9. Related Guides

1. Flashcards

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2. What is Italian?

Italian (italiano) is a Romance language descended directly from Latin, with around 65 million native speakers, chiefly in Italy, San Marino, Switzerland (Ticino) and Vatican City. Standard Italian is based on the prestigious Tuscan dialect of Florence, the language of Dante.

For an English speaker it is one of the most approachable languages to start: the spelling is almost perfectly phonetic (read it as written), there are thousands of recognisable Latin-rooted cognates, and the sounds are clear. The work lies in gender, articles and verb conjugation.

Why learn Italian?

3. Core Vocabulary (1–66)

High-frequency words and phrases. This is the exact deck used by the flashcard trainer above. Use the search box to filter.

#ItalianoEnglish

4. Essential Grammar

Every Italian noun is masculine or feminine, and articles and adjectives agree with it in gender and number. As a rule of thumb, nouns ending in -o are masculine and -a feminine (with exceptions); plurals usually shift -o → -i and -a → -e.

Articles

the (sing.)the (plur.)a/an
masc.il / lo / l'i / gliun / uno
fem.la / l'leuna / un'

Present tense of regular verbs

Three verb groups by infinitive ending: -are, -ere, -ire. With parlare (to speak): parlo (I speak), parli (you), parla (he/she), parliamo (we), parlate (you pl.), parlano (they).

For the past, the everyday tense is the passato prossimo: ho mangiato (I ate / have eaten), built from avere/essere + past participle.

Subject pronouns are usually dropped — the verb ending already shows who. Use tu for informal "you" and Lei (capitalised) for formal.

5. Pronunciation

Five pure vowels (a e i o u), always crisp. The tricky bits are a few spelling-to-sound rules:

SpellingSoundExample
c/g + e,i"ch" / "j"ciao (chow), gelato (jelato)
c/g + a,o,uhard "k" / "g"casa, gatto
ch / ghhard k / g before e,ichi (kee), spaghetti
gli"lli" (palatal)famiglia (fa-MEE-lya)
gn"ny"gnocchi (NYOK-kee)
double consonantsheld longer — they matter!nonno vs. nono

Stress usually falls on the second-to-last syllable; a written accent (caffè, città) marks final stress.

6. Common Mistakes

7. Learning Resources

8. Culture & Context

One language, many dialects

Alongside standard Italian, regional languages (Neapolitan, Sicilian, Venetian, Sardinian and more) thrive. Standard Italian unifies, but local speech colours everyday life.

La bella figura

Presentation and graciousness — fare bella figura — matter. Greetings, dressing well and the ritual of meals are part of the language's culture.

Food is grammar too

Coffee rules (no cappuccino after lunch), the order of courses (antipasto, primo, secondo) and regional specialities are vocabulary you'll use constantly.