The 2000 Most Used Italian Words are here! WordPower - Italian.
10 New Words a Day, 3650 New Words a Year! Rapidly build your vocabulary with MyWords.
Ease into Italian with 1 new word a day! Gradually build your vocabulary and perfect your pronunciation with WordPower Lite - Italian.
Premium Plus is Here! The fastest way to fluency just got faster. Start your 1-on-1 Skype calls today!
Italian not enough? Try another one of our 8 languages and get 50% off the subscription! 
You need a holiday. You’ve been studying too hard. You’ve started talking in your sleep, repeating ItalianPod101.com dialogues in bed. How about a few days away, riding horses, doing some hiking and mountain climbing. Sound good? What’s that? You don’t want to neglect your Italian studies? Well, how about a vacation in Trentino? You can do all those things there, in an Italian speaking environment! How’s that?
What Italian words can we use to translate the English “some”, “any”, “a few”, a lot of”, and so on?
Today we will be studying the so called partitivo and its different usages. For a detailed explanation be sure to check the PDF!
Dialogue - Informal
|
Play
|
Popup
Review Track
|
Play
|
Popup
Premium Learning Center
You’re going to like Italy. We know. The food is fantastic, the wine is delicious, the people are so friendly that strangers greet each other with kisses and hugs. Tuscany is so beautiful that you’ll want to live there, and Rome is so popular that all roads lead there.
In the 21st lesson in the Beginner course, you’ll be learning how to say “I like (something)” in Italian, useful for expressing how much you love the place. You’ll also be going over the sentence pattern, “I don’t like (something)”, useful for people who are unfortunate enough to not live in Italy. We will be continuing the discussion of the verb piacere and its negative form, along with the functioning of the double negation in Italian. We will also consider affirmative answers.
Dialogue - Informal
|
Play
|
Popup
Review Track
|
Play
|
Popup
Premium Learning Center
Category: Beginner Lessons | No Comments »
Grammar: alcuni, del, qualche | Function: using partitivo | Topic: vacations | Politeness Level: informal
Share This