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Italian Grammar tutors, lessons & classes

Allora The universal Italian sentence-opener — what a tutor says the moment a grammar point begins.

Personally vetted Italian tutors who teach grammar with precision. Lessons for students who want to understand why Italian works the way it does — the articles, the conjugations, the famous congiuntivo, and the rules that anchor real fluency.

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Italian grammar tutor explaining a conjugation point to an intermediate adult student
20 yrs
EST. 2006
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Strommen has been teaching Italian since 2006. Italian Grammar is the format we recommend for intermediate learners hitting a plateau, certification candidates preparing for CILS or CELI, academic students at university or graduate level, and heritage speakers filling in the formal grammar that family exposure didn't deliver. Every tutor below was met and vetted by us in person or via thorough video interview. No marketplace. No automated profile-creation.

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Regole — grammar essentials

5 Italian grammar topics that unlock real fluency

These are the grammar points that most often separate intermediate learners from true B2-and-up fluency. Save the infographic and bring your questions to the trial.

  1. 01

    Passato prossimo vs imperfetto

    The two everyday past tenses don't map onto English's single past. Passato prossimo covers completed actions and single events (ieri ho mangiato la pasta). Imperfetto covers ongoing states, habitual past actions, and background description (da bambino mangiavo sempre la pasta). Mastering the distinction is the single biggest leap most intermediate learners make.

    e.g. Mentre studiavo (imp), è suonato (pp) il telefono.

  2. 02

    Il congiuntivo

    The famous Italian subjunctive carries opinions, doubts, wishes, and clauses introduced by conjunctions like benché and prima che. It follows verbs of opinion (penso che, credo che, spero che) and has four tenses. Native speakers debate whether casual usage is declining, but educated Italian writing and formal speech still expect it. B2-and-up fluency requires it.

    e.g. Penso che lui sia (cong) la persona giusta per il lavoro.

  3. 03

    Ne and ci pronouns

    Two short Italian particles that condense whole prepositional phrases. Ne stands in for di + something (quanti libri hai? ne ho tre). Ci stands in for a + something or in + something (vai al cinema? sì, ci vado). They feel small but they're load-bearing in real Italian and almost always missing from intermediate learners' speech.

    e.g. Quanti caffè bevi al giorno? Ne bevo cinque.

  4. 04

    Lei as 3rd-person formal

    The formal you (Lei) takes the third-person-singular verb form across all tenses. Lei è, Lei ha, Lei prende, Lei vorrebbe. Possessives follow: il Suo libro. Pronouns use La and Le: La ringrazio, Le scrivo. Capitalizing Lei, La, Le, and Suo in formal writing is a courtesy convention that signals respect.

    e.g. Buongiorno, dottore. Come sta? La ringrazio del suo tempo.

  5. 05

    Adjective-noun agreement

    Italian adjectives agree with their nouns in gender and number. Una pizza buona, un libro buono, le pizze buone, i libri buoni. The four forms of every regular adjective need to surface automatically; getting them wrong is the persistent intermediate-level fingerprint that disappears only with explicit drilling. Some adjectives ending in -e have only two forms (singular and plural) and are easier to get right.

    e.g. I ragazzi italiani sono simpatici, le ragazze italiane sono simpatiche.

About Italian Grammar

The rules behind real Italian fluency

What you'll cover

Lessons & classes tailored to Italian Grammar

The article system and noun-adjective agreement

The seven definite articles and their phonological rules (il, lo, l', la, i, gli, le), the indefinite articles (un, uno, una, un'), partitive constructions (del, della, dei, delle), and the gender-and-number agreement system that ripples through every noun phrase. Drilled in context with real Italian source material until articles surface automatically.

The full verb conjugation system

The three regular conjugation classes (-are, -ere, -ire), the high-frequency irregular verbs (essere, avere, andare, fare, dire, dare, stare, modals, sapere, venire), and the full tense system: present, passato prossimo, imperfetto, trapassato prossimo, passato remoto, futuro semplice, futuro anteriore, conditional, and all four congiuntivo tenses. Sequenced so the highest-leverage tenses come first.

Congiuntivo, conditional, and sequence of tenses

The subjunctive mood across all four tenses, with the triggers (verbs of opinion, doubt, emotion, necessity, and specific conjunctions) drilled until they're automatic. The conditional mood for politeness, hypotheticals, and indirect statements. Sequence-of-tenses rules pairing main-clause tense with subordinate-clause tense. The famous se clauses (real, possible, and impossible hypotheticals). Heavy practice on the moves that mark B2-and-up Italian.

Pronouns, particles, and formal register

The full pronoun system (subject, direct object, indirect object, reflexive, combined pronouns like me lo and glielo) plus the famous ne and ci particles. The Lei formal register with its third-person verbs, possessives, and pronouns. Capitalization conventions in formal writing. The placement rules for pronouns with infinitives, gerunds, and imperatives. Drilled until the pronoun finds the right slot without conscious thought.

FAQ

About Italian Grammar lessons & classes

Why is Italian grammar so much harder than Italian vocabulary?

Vocabulary in Italian is unusually friendly to English speakers because of the Latin-cognate density. Grammar is harder because Italian preserves much more of the inflectional system that English mostly lost: full verb conjugation across multiple tenses and moods, noun-adjective agreement for gender and number, an elaborate pronoun system, and the subjunctive mood with real semantic load. None of this is impossible, but it requires explicit instruction and consistent drilling that conversational immersion alone doesn't deliver.

When do I really need to use the congiuntivo?

After verbs of opinion (penso che, credo che, spero che), doubt (dubito che), emotion (sono contento che, mi dispiace che), and necessity (bisogna che, è necessario che), plus after certain conjunctions (benché, sebbene, affinché, prima che, a meno che). Native speakers sometimes drop it in casual Northern speech, but educated writing, formal speech, and any certification beyond B1 expects it. Avoidance is the persistent intermediate-fingerprint we work to eliminate.

How do I finally get passato prossimo versus imperfetto right?

Stop translating from English; English's single past tense doesn't map cleanly. Instead, learn the Italian semantics directly. Passato prossimo: completed action, single event, change of state. Imperfetto: ongoing state, habitual past, background description. The classic test sentence: mentre [imperfetto], [passato prossimo], meaning while I was doing X, Y happened. Internalizing this takes months of targeted exposure plus correction, which is the part a grammar tutor accelerates dramatically.

Do I need to learn the passato remoto?

For reading and writing, yes. For everyday conversation in Northern and Central Italy, much less so. Passato remoto is the historic past used for distant or narrative past actions: Dante scrisse la Divina Commedia nel 1320. In Southern Italian conversation (especially Sicily, Naples, Calabria), it's still active in everyday speech. In literature, history, and journalism about distant events, it's standard. Recognize and conjugate it if you plan to read Italian novels or live in the South. Deprioritize it if your goal is only conversational Italian in Milan or Rome.

Can grammar lessons help me prepare for CILS or CELI?

Yes, and several of our grammar tutors specifically prep CILS and CELI candidates. CILS DUE B2 expects mastery of the indicative tense system, the conditional, and the present and past subjunctive. CILS TRE C1 adds the imperfect and pluperfect subjunctive, sequence-of-tenses with subjunctive, the passive voice, and full pronoun flexibility. CELI 3 and CELI 4 cover similar territory with their own exam-specific formats. We use real past exam materials and pace the curriculum to your exam date. Mock exams included.

I'm fluent in Spanish or French. Does that help with Italian grammar?

Significantly, yes. Italian shares a Romance-language framework with Spanish and French: gendered nouns, verb conjugations across similar tenses, the subjunctive mood, polite-versus-casual pronouns. Spanish speakers find the verb conjugation patterns familiar and the vocabulary partially transparent. French speakers find the formal register and the literary tenses familiar. Both groups still need to learn Italian-specific patterns (the article system is more elaborate than Spanish, the pronoun particles ne and ci don't exist in Spanish, the congiuntivo triggers differ from French), but the foundation transfers.

How is an Italian Grammar lesson structured?

Typically 60 to 90 minutes. One or two grammar topics per lesson, introduced with the rule and the underlying logic, then drilled in context with real Italian source material (newspaper sentences, podcast transcripts, literary excerpts, your own writing samples). Homework is consistent: exercises plus a short writing or speaking assignment that applies the new rule. Review of the previous lesson's grammar at the start of each new session so the material accumulates rather than fades.

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