The Pronominal Verbs
When Italian Verbs Add a Little Something
italianosoprano.substack.com/p/the-pronom...
#ItalianGrammar #PronominalVerbs #LearnItalian #ItalianVerbs #LanguageLearning #AdvancedItalian #ItalianIdioms
The Art of Saying "He Seems Like a Good Husband" in Italian
italianosoprano.substack.com/p/the-art-of...
#LearnItalian #ItalianPhrases #ItalianLanguage #ContextIsEverything #LanguageNuance #SpeakItalian #ItalianIdioms
Essere una patata bollente = to be a “hot potato” a difficult, inconvenient situation everyone tries to avoid.
Italian drama at its finest.
#italian #languagelearning #learninglanguages #studyitalian #italianlearning #italianidioms #studywithme #learningwirhme
How do you ask someone to keep a secret in your language? Tell me in the comments.
#learnitalian #idiomoftheday #studyitalian #italianidioms #languagelearning #italianexpression #speakitalian #speakitalianlikeanative
Italian idiom alert:
In bocca al lupo! = Good luck!
It literally means: “Into the mouth of the wolf!”
Reply: Crepi il lupo! (May the wolf die!)
Have you heard this one before?
#learnitalian #italianphrases #italiantips #idiomsoftheworld #speakitalian #italianidioms #coffeeandconversation