Basics 1
NOTES (by DuoItalian) PERSONAL SUBJECT PRONOUNS In Italian there are (4) singular subject pronouns and (3) plural. Personal subject [...]
NOTES (by DuoItalian) PERSONAL SUBJECT PRONOUNS In Italian there are (4) singular subject pronouns and (3) plural. Personal subject [...]
NOTES (by DuoItalian) PLURAL ARTICLES The plural definite articles (the) are: gli - for masculine plural nouns that start [...]
NOTES (by DuoItalian) YES or NO The Italian words for “yes” and “no” are simply sì and no. But [...]
NOTES (from Duolingo) INGREDIENTS Italian has three ways to express the presence of an ingredient in the name of [...]
NOTES (from Duolingo) The most common noun classes in Italian are the following: Nouns ending in a in the [...]
NOTES (by DuoItalian) While Italy is home to many wonderful animal species that are unique to its borders (Alpine [...]
NOTES (by DuoItalian) Unlike most languages, Italians speak of hunger or thirst as a state of mind. They do [...]
NOTES (from Duolingo) Italian possessives are in the form definite article (il, la, i, le) + possessive adjective. They [...]
NOTES (by DuoItalian) There are some differing views on which Italian terms translate to which type of upper body [...]
NOTES (by DuoItalian) One way to ask questions in Italian is to add a question mark to the end [...]
NOTES (by DuoItalian) As mentioned previously, every Italian verb has an infinitive form (i.e. the version of the verb [...]
NOTES (by DuoItalian) MASCULINE & FEMININE Most colors in Italian can be masculine or feminine, depending on the context: Il caffè [...]
NOTES (by DuoItalian) A conjunction is a part of speech that is used to connect words, phrases, clauses, or [...]
NOTES (from Duolingo) Prepositions, just like in English, don’t always make sense. For example, things that in English are [...]
NOTES (by DuoItalian) DAYS OF THE WEEK lunedì (Monday) martedì (Tuesday) mercoledì (Wednesday) giovedì (Thursday) venerdì (Friday) sabato (Saturday) [...]
NOTES (by DuoItalian) As a general rule, possessive adjectives are preceded by an article and this is still the [...]
NOTES (by DuoItalian) Similar to most of the world, Italy utilizes the sistema metrico decimale (decimal metric system). This [...]
NOTES (from Duolingo) There are three ways to specify an occupation in Italian: Fare + determinate article + profession [...]
NOTES (by DuoItalian) Muro and parete both translate to "wall" in Italian and are interchangeable most of the time, [...]
NOTES (by DuoItalian) Adjectives (aggettivi) are words that describe a noun. Unlike the English language, Italian adjectives most often [...]
NOTES (from Duolingo) The verb "mancare" when referring to people, works like "piacere": the indirect object misses the subject. [...]