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Italian Lessons

Learning a new language is tricky, its more than just memorizing "Ciao" in Italian is "Goodbye." Not everything translates this perfectly, however, its much more complicated than that. Aside from learning simple translations, we also must learn how to say the words with the proper accent and pronunciation. In this first chapter, we are going to look at the alphabet and ways the Italian letters are pronounced. We are also going to look at simple and essential words and phrases to get started with Italian. An important note: letters in the alphabet, pronunciations, and words used in translations may vary from country to country.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Knowing the alphabet above will help you to pronounce words in Italian better, pay good attention to the pronunciations the letters in the chart. Below here are some key pronunciation rules to consider when reading Italian. These are not the only rules but they are some of the most drastically different and important rules to consider. Note that it's important to practice with a native speaker and adapt THEIR pronunciations as I've mentioned before, pronunciations can differ from country to country.

Italian Pronunciation Rules

Letter

A

C

C (before i/e)

G

G (before i/e)

H

I

O

Rr

S

Ss

U

Y

Z

 

Basic Grammar

Here we are going to learn some basic parts of speech that relate to both Italian and English, but we will also look at components unique to Italian.

Sentence Essentials

Every sentence requires:

1. Subject

2. Verb

3. Terminal Punctuation

4. Complete Thought

Subject a noun that is performing something in a sentence

Example:

Shaun eats a sandwich.

Shaun is the subject because he is performing an action.

Subjects can appear as nouns or pronouns.

Noun a person place, thing, idea, or animal

Pronoun a word that replaces a noun

Example:

Shaun eats the sandwich.

He eats the sandwich.

The same person is a subject in both sentences: "Shaun" and "he." Shaun is a subject noun whereas "he" is a subject pronoun.

UNIQUE TO ITALIAN: although we have some masculine and feminine nouns and pronouns in English (i.e. he, she, prince, princess, etc.), ALL nouns are either masculine or feminine in ITALIAN, even inanimate objects. TYPICALLY, nouns that end in "o" are masculine and nouns that end in "a" are feminine. However, not only is that is ALWAYS the case, but not all nouns end in "o" or "a." The real way to know a noun's gender is to know the article associate with it. If its with a masculine article and if its with a feminine article it is a feminine noun (article explanations to come).

UNIQUE TO ITALIAN: Italian does NOT require a subject in each sentence especially if the subject would be "io," "tu," or "noi," (more on this in chapter 2).

Verb an action- something you can do (we will learn more about this in chapter 2)

Example:

Henry finishes his homework.

"Finishes" is the verb because its an action.

Terminal Punctuation: marks in sentences that indicate the end of a sentence.

Italian does have the same terminal punctuation that English has: "." "!" and "?"

Finally, the last important attribute to having a proper sentence in a complete thought.

Example:

Jake walks.                    (COMPLETE THOUGHT)

Mark runs to the.         (INCOMPLETE THOUGHT)

Another essential component would be that the sentence needs to start with a capital letter.

Other Parts of Speech

Adjective describes a noun

Example:

The yellow bird eats the small seed.

UNIQUE TO ITALIAN: Spanish adjectives CAN appear before the noun in its describing however they more commonly appear AFTER the noun.

Adverb describes how a verb is performed

Example:

Neal spoke calmly to the child.

Preposition words that introduce words/phrases that share direction, time, place, location, spatial relationships

Example:

He went to the party at his friends house.

Conjunction word or phrase that connections other words and phrases

Example: 

Maria and Stephanie danced and sang at the party.

Interjection an abrupt remark

Example:

Stop!

Plural, Formal, and Number

 

Before we look at the vocabulary for this chapter, let's look at a few key notations that will be found in the list below. These are in parentheses and are important to understand the phrases and their uses better.

Formal formal speech is to be used when talking to: 1. someone much older 2. someone in authority above you, i.e. a teacher or boss.

Familiar familiar (or informal) speech is used when talking to: 1. someone younger or around your age 2. you 2. someone you are close to, like friends or family

Singular this refers to one person or thing

Plural this refers to more than one person or thing

Masculine this refers to male objects or people

Mixed this refers to more than one person or object but at least one person or object is male

Feminine this refers to female objects or people

Articles

 

Articles are essentially articles. There are two basic types of articles which are definite and indefinite. Definite articles refer to something specific. If I say, "Give me THE book." it is implied that I'm talking about a specific book. If I say, "Give me A book." it means that I don't need a specific book, I just need a book in general.

In English the articles are "a, an, the, some." 'The' can refer to multiple things or one thing; I can the THE book or THE books. I cannot do that for the indefinite article for example "A book" would become "SOME books."

In Italian, articles are dependent on the noun they are modifying. This means if the noun is singular, the article is singular. What is different from Italian to English is that nouns can be feminine or masculine and therefore Itailan articles also need to agree in gender and number to the nouns they modify. Check out the notes below.

Contractions

Contractions are when you take two words and put them together, usually removing at least one letter. Below are the many contractions in Italian.

Chapter 1 Vocabulary​​​​​​​​

Conversation Starters

Hello/hi          

How are you?         

I am well.           

And you?                

What's your name?     

My name is...              

Nice to meet you.        

Where are you from?        

I'm from...    

The United States         

Good morning           

Good afternoon  

Good evening

Good night         

See you later!                      

Goodbye    

Also  

Asking for Clarification and Being Polite

I am practicing... 

English                          

Italian 

I understand.                                

Do you understand me?         

Can you repeat it?                 

More slowly 

Can you translate it?   

Sorry                        

Please                           

Excuse me                   

Yes                                 

No/Not                   

Good job   

Good

Well                 

Thank you                   

Much/A lot                               

You're welcome                    

How do you say…                       

What does... mean?                

Helpful Words and Phrases

I speak                              

You speak/talk                   

He speaks/talks                 

She speaks/talks                                  

I have                        

You have                          

He has               

She has                               

A question              

I like                               

You like/Do you like                

The cat                                

The dog                              

The water

The food

There is/there are

Because                          

Of/from                        

And                            

Or                                    

At/to                         

But                             

With                              

Without     

One

Two

Three

Four

Five

Six

Seven

Eight

Nine

Ten                 

Common Nouns                     

Young person                 

Old person                   

The boy                      

The girl                            

The man                      

The woman                  

The adult               

The child                 

The son                         

The daughter

The children         

The friend              

The mother             

The father

The parents               

The brother           

The sister     

The cousin          

The husband          

The wife                    

The boyfriend        

The girlfriend         

The aunt              

The uncle              

The nephew          

The niece                    

The grandfather

The grandmother

The grandparents               

The great grandfather

The great grandmother   

The great grandparents   

The grandchild 

The grandchildren    

Sir/Mr.                   

Ma'am/Mrs.  

The people         

The person        

The family        

The store           

The school           

The house    

The restaurant     

The park          

The work/job

Ciao

Come stai?

Sto bene.

E tu?

Come ti chiami?

Mi chiamo…

Piacere di conoscerti.

Di dove sei?

Sono di...

Gli Stati Uniti

Buon giorno

Buon pomeriggio

Buona serata

Buona notte

Alla prossima!

Arrivederci

Anche ​

Sto facendo pratica...

L'inglese

L'italiano

Capisco.

Mi capisci?

Puoi ripeterlo?

Più lentamente

Puoi tradurlo?

Scusa

Per favore

Mi scusi

No/Non

Buon lavoro

Buon

Bene

Grazie

Molto

Prego

Come si dice…

Cosa significa? ​

Io parlo

Tu parli/parli

Lui parla

Lei parla

Io ho

Tu hai

Lui ha

Lei ha

Una domanda

Mi piace

Ti piace/Ti piace

Il gatto

Il cane

L'acqua

Il cibo

C'è /ci sono

Perché

Di/da

e

o

A

Ma

Insieme

A Privo di

Uno

Due

Tre

quattro

Cinque

Sei

Sette

Otto

Nove

Dieci

Giovane

Vecchio/anziana

Il ragazzo

La ragazza

L'uomo

La donna

L'adulto/la adulta

Il bambino

Il figlio

La figlia

I bambini

L'amico/l'amica

La madre

Il padre

I genitori

Il fratello

La sorella

Il cugino/la cugina

Il marito

La moglie

Il fidanzato

La fidanzata

La zia

Lo zio

Il nipote

La nipote

Il nonno

La nonna

I nonni

Il bisnonno

La bisnonna

I bisnonni

Il nipote

I nipoti

Signore/Sig.

signora/signora

Le persone

La persona

La famiglia

Il negozio

La scuola

La casa

Il ristorante

Il parco

Il lavoro ​

English Equivalent

ah

k

ch

guh

j

(silent)

ee

oe

*roll your tongue

z

s

oo

ee or yuh

ts

English Example

Andre, obvious

cat, kite

chicken, chew     

gas, gain

gym, jump

seed, feet

ocean, open

carro

has, his

say, saw

food, mood

me, yes

pizza

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