Italian for Beginners

Your first steps in Italian

Why Italian is easier than you think

Italian is a Romance language that descends directly from Latin. Like English, it has clear rules and patterns. The biggest advantage? Italian is pronounced as it's written - no surprises like in English or French!

The language has only 21 letters (no j, k, w, x, y in original words) and stress usually falls on the second-to-last syllable. This makes reading predictable and logical.

Italian verbs follow three main patterns (-are, -ere, -ire) and once you know one pattern, you can recognize hundreds of verbs. Perfect for reading simple texts!

Important tips:

  • Note: c and g change sound depending on the following letter
  • Double consonants are really pronounced double (pizza = pit-tsa)
  • Most words end in a vowel - this gives Italian its musical sound
Chapter 1

The Italian Alphabet & Sounds

The basics of pronunciation

Italian has 21 letters, but with foreign words you use all 26. Pronunciation is much more consistent than in English.

Important sound combinations

Double consonants - Important difference!

In Italian, double consonants make a difference in meaning. Pronounce them longer:

Accents - When and why

Chapter 2

Greetings & Essential Phrases

The foundation of every conversation

These words and phrases appear in every Italian story. They are the building blocks of social interaction.

Greetings throughout the day

Buongiorno Good morning/Good day (Until ~5:00 PM) Formal & informal
Buon pomeriggio Good afternoon (12:00-5:00 PM) Less common
Buonasera Good evening (From ~5:00 PM) Formal & informal
Buonanotte Good night (When going to bed) Intimate/family
Ciao Hi/Bye (All day) Informal only!
Salve Hello (All day) Neutral polite

How are you? - Questions

Come va? How's it going? (General) Informal
Come stai? How are you? (Personal) Informal (tu)
Come sta? How are you? (Personal) Formal (Lei)
Come state? How are you all? (Plural) Informal (voi)
Tutto bene? Everything good? (Short & friendly) Informal
Tutto a posto? Everything alright? (Everything okay?) Informal
Come ti trovi? How are you finding it? (About situation/place) Informal

How are you? - Answers

Bene, grazie Good, thanks (Standard positive) Universal
Molto bene, grazie Very well, thanks (Extra positive) Universal
Benissimo! Excellent! (Very enthusiastic) Informal
Non c'è male Not bad (Neutral) Informal
Così così So-so (Mixed/varying) Informal
Abbastanza bene Pretty good (Moderately positive) Universal
Male Bad (Negative) Universal
Non molto bene Not very well (Mildly negative) Universal
Va bene It's going well (Everything's okay) Universal
Tutto bene All good (Everything's fine) Universal
E tu? And you? (Asking back) Informal
E Lei? And you? (Asking back) Formal

Saying goodbye

Arrivederci Goodbye
Arrivederla Goodbye (formal)
Ciao Bye
A presto See you soon
A dopo See you later
A domani See you tomorrow
Ci vediamo See you

Polite forms - Essential!

Per favore Please
💡 Always use with requests
Per piacere Please
💡 Slightly more formal than per favore
Grazie Thank you
💡 Universal and always appropriate
Grazie mille Thank you very much
💡 Literally: thousand thanks
Prego You're welcome/Please
💡 Reply to grazie OR when offering
Scusi Excuse me (formal)
💡 Formal - getting attention
Scusa Sorry (informal)
💡 Informal - apologies
Mi dispiace I'm sorry
💡 Real apologies/sympathy
Permesso Excuse me/May I pass
💡 When you want to get through

Important responses

Yes (Note the accent!)
No No (No accent)
Non lo so I don't know (Very useful!)
Forse Maybe (FOR-seh)
Certo Certainly (CHAIR-toh)
Va bene Okay/Good (Most used agreement)
D'accordo Agreed (dah-KOR-doh)
Chapter 3

Essere (To Be) - The most important verb

This verb appears in almost every sentence

Just like in English, "to be" is irregular but essential. You'll see it constantly in Italian texts.

The conjugation - Learn this by heart!

io sono (I am)
Io sono italiano
I am Italian
tu sei (you are)
Tu sei simpatico
You are nice
lui/lei è (he/she is)
Lei è bella
She is beautiful
noi siamo (we are)
Noi siamo amici
We are friends
voi siete (you (pl.) are)
Voi siete giovani
You are young
loro sono (they are)
Loro sono studenti
They are students

Common expressions with essere

C'è There is
C'è un problema - There is a problem
Ci sono There are
Ci sono molte persone - There are many people
Come sei? What are you like? (Describing character/appearance)
Come stai? How are you? (Asking about health/wellbeing (stare))
Sono di... I'm from...
Sono di Roma - I'm from Rome
È vero It's true (Confirmation)
È possibile It's possible (Expressing possibility)
È importante It's important (Emphasizing)

Practice sentences - Recognize the pattern

Il libro è sul tavolo The book is on the table
La pizza è buona The pizza is good
I bambini sono a scuola The children are at school
Dove sei? Where are you?
Siamo in Italia We are in Italy
Non sono sicuro I'm not sure