🇮🇹 Italiano A1 · Lesson 1
A1 Progress
HomeLesson 1Lesson 2Lesson 3Lesson 4Lesson 5Lesson 6Lesson 7Lesson 8A2 →
Complete Italian Course · A1

Lesson 1: Benvenuti! Welcome to Italian

Greetings · Introductions · The Alphabet · Pronunciation · Numbers 0–20

CEFR Level A1
01 🎯

Learning Objectives

By the end of this lesson, you will be able to do all of the following — these are your CEFR A1 targets for today:

Pronounce every letter of the Italian alphabet
Greet people formally and informally
Introduce yourself (name, nationality, origin)
Ask "What is your name?" and respond
Say "How are you?" and give a simple reply
Use subject pronouns (io, tu, lui, lei…)
Conjugate essere (to be) in present tense
Count from 0 to 20 in Italian
Say goodbye in different ways
Understand basic Italian politeness culture
⏱️Estimated study time: 2.5–3.5 hours. Take breaks every 45 minutes. Drink water. Your brain consolidates language best when rested!
02 🔤

The Italian Alphabet & Pronunciation

Italian uses the Latin alphabet — but only 21 letters in the native alphabet (5 foreign letters appear in borrowed words). The great news: Italian is almost perfectly phonetic. Once you learn the sounds, you can read almost anything!

🌟 Golden Rule of Italian Pronunciation
In Italian, every letter is pronounced. There are no silent letters (except "h"). What you see is what you say. This makes Italian far easier to pronounce than French or English!
The 21 Native Italian Letters

The 5 "foreign" letters (J, K, W, X, Y) appear in loanwords like jeans, karatè, whisky, extra, yogurt.

🎵 Key Pronunciation Rules

Most letters sound like English — but these crucial ones differ. Master these and you'll sound great!

Vowels — The Heart of Italian Sound

Italian has 5 pure vowel sounds — no diphthongs or glides. Always short and clear.

Aahlike "father" — never like "cat" · e.g. amico (friend)
Eehlike "bed" — never like "me" · e.g. sera (evening)
Ieelike "machine" — never like "bit" · e.g. isola (island)
Oohlike "vote" — never like "hot" · e.g. ora (hour)
Uoolike "food" — never like "cup" · e.g. uva (grape)
Tricky Consonants — C, G, SC, GL, GN

These change sound depending on the vowel that follows:

C + a/o/ukhard K sound: casa (house), conto (bill)
C + e/ichlike "chair": cena (dinner), ciao (hi/bye)
CH + e/ikhard K: che (what/that), chi (who)
G + a/o/ughard G: gatto (cat), gusto (taste)
G + e/ijlike "genre": gelato (ice cream), giro (tour)
GH + e/ighard G: spaghetti, ghiaccio (ice)
SC + e/ishlike "shoe": scena (scene), pesce (fish)
SC + a/o/usklike "school": scala (stairs)
GNnylike "canyon": gnocchi, bagno (bathroom)
GL + ilylike "million": figlio (son), aglio (garlic)
Rrolled rTip of tongue vibrates: Roma, arrivederci
Zts / dzpizza (ts), zero (dz)
HsilentAlways silent: hanno (they have) sounds like "anno" (year)
Double lettersheld longerVery important! nono (ninth) vs nonno (grandfather) — hold the NN!
Stress & Accents

In Italian, stress usually falls on the second-to-last syllable:

par-LA-re (to speak) · ca-SA (house) · bel-LO (beautiful)

When the stress falls elsewhere, it's marked with an accent mark:

città (city) · caffè (coffee) · però (but) · perché (why/because)

💡 The accent at the end of a word is always stressed. This is very common in Italian!
📊 C and G Sound Chart
C and G Pronunciation Rules Letter C C + a, o, u → K sound C + e, i → CH sound casa, conto, curva (house, bill, curve) cena, ciao, certo (dinner, hi, sure) Exception: CH + e/i = K (che, chi) Letter G G + a, o, u → Hard G G + e, i → J sound gatto, gusto, gonna (cat, taste, skirt) gelato, giro, gente (ice cream, tour, people) Exception: GH + e/i = hard G (spaghetti)
03 👋

Greetings & Basic Phrases

Italian has two "registers": formal (Lei) and informal (tu). Use informal with friends, family, and young people. Use formal with strangers, elders, and in professional settings.

When to Use Formal vs Informal INFORMAL (tu) 😊 Friends · Family · Peers Young people · Classmates FORMAL (Lei) 🎩 Strangers · Elders · Bosses Shops · Restaurants · Officials
Essential Greetings
ItalianPhoneticEnglishWhen to use
Ciao
— Ciao, come stai?
CHOWHi / ByeInformal (hello AND goodbye)
Salve
— Salve, buongiorno!
SAL-vehHello / GreetingsNeutral — safe in any situation
Buongiorno
— Buongiorno, signora!
bwon-JOR-noGood morning / Good dayFormal & informal — until ~2pm
Buon pomeriggiobwon po-meh-REE-johGood afternoonRarely used in speech; ~2–5pm
Buonasera
— Buonasera, professore.
bwon-ah-SEH-rahGood eveningFormal & informal — from ~5pm on
Buonanottebwon-ah-NOT-tehGood nightWhen going to sleep / parting at night
Arrivederci
— Grazie, arrivederci!
ah-ree-veh-DEHR-cheeGoodbye (formal)Formal — "until we see each other again"
Arrivederlaah-ree-veh-DEHR-lahGoodbye (very formal)Very formal — to elders, VIPs
A prestoah PREH-stohSee you soonCasual departure
A domaniah doh-MAH-neeSee you tomorrowCasual
A dopoah DOH-pohSee you laterCasual
🙏 Polite Essentials
ItalianPhoneticEnglishNotes
GrazieGRAH-tsyehThank youMost common
Grazie milleGRAH-tsyeh MIL-lehThank you very muchLiterally "a thousand thanks"
PregoPREH-gohYou're welcome / Please / Go aheadVery versatile word!
Per favorepehr fah-VOH-rehPleaseInformal/neutral
Per piacerepehr pyah-CHEH-rehPleaseSlightly more polite
Scusa / ScusiSKOO-zah / SKOO-zeeExcuse me / SorryInformal / Formal
Mi dispiacemee dee-SPYAH-chehI'm sorry (sincere)For apologies, not just "excuse me"
Piacerepyah-CHEH-rehNice to meet youWhen being introduced
Sì / Nosee / nohYes / NoRemember: not "si" — it has an accent!
😊 "How Are You?" — Informal vs Formal
ItalianRegisterEnglish
Come stai?🟢 InformalHow are you? (to a friend)
Come sta?🟡 FormalHow are you? (to a stranger)
Come va?🟢 CasualHow's it going? (very common!)
Tutto bene?🟢 CasualEverything good?
RESPONSES
Bene, grazie!✓ Always fineFine / Well, thank you!
Molto bene!✓ Always fineVery well!
Abbastanza bene.✓ Always finePretty well / Fairly good.
Così così.✓ Always fineSo-so. (lit. "like this, like this")
Non c'è male.✓ Always fineNot bad. (lit. "there's no evil")
Benissimo!✓ Always fineWonderful! / Perfectly well!
Male. / Non sto bene.✓ Honest answerBadly. / I'm not well.
💡Cultural tip: Italians often respond to "Come va?" with "Non c'è male" — it sounds modest but usually means things are actually quite good! Don't worry if someone says this; it's not a complaint.
04 🤝

Introductions: Chi sei? (Who Are You?)

Asking & Saying Your Name
ItalianPhoneticEnglishRegister
Come ti chiami?KOH-meh tee KYA-meeWhat's your name?Informal
Come si chiama?KOH-meh see KYA-mahWhat's your name?Formal
Mi chiamo…mee KYA-mohMy name is… (lit. "I call myself")Both
Sono…SOH-nohI am…Both
Il mio nome è…eel MEE-oh NOH-meh ehMy name is… (more formal)Formal
Piacere di conoscerti!pyah-CHEH-reh dee ko-NOH-shehr-teeNice to meet you! (informal)Informal
Piacere di conoscerla!pyah-CHEH-reh dee ko-NOH-shehr-lahNice to meet you! (formal)Formal
🌍 Where Are You From?
ItalianEnglishExample
Di dove sei?Where are you from? (informal)— Di dove sei, Marco?
Di dov'è?Where are you from? (formal)— Di dov'è, signora?
Sono di…I'm from…— Sono di Roma.
Vengo da…I come from…— Vengo dall'Inghilterra.
Sono italiano/aI'm Italian (m/f)— Sono italiana.
Sono americano/aI'm American (m/f)— Sono americano.
Abito a…I live in…— Abito a Milano.
⚠️Gender alert! In Italian, adjectives change based on gender. Nationalities work the same way:
italiano (male) → italiana (female)
americano (male) → americana (female)
We'll study this in depth in Lesson 2!
🗺️ Common Nationalities in Italian
CountryM nationalityF nationality
Italy / Italiaitalianoitaliana
USA / Stati Unitiamericanoamericana
UK / Inghilterraingleseinglese
France / Franciafrancesefrancese
Germany / Germaniatedescotedesca
Spain / Spagnaspagnolospagnola
China / Cinacinesecinese
Japan / Giapponegiapponesegiapponese
Brazil / Brasilebrasilianobrasiliana
Switzerland / Svizzerasvizzerosvizzera

💡 Note: nationalities ending in -ese or -ista are the same for m and f!

05 📚

Grammar: Subject Pronouns & "Essere" (to be)

This is the most important verb in Italian — and in any language. Let's master it now!

Italian Subject Pronouns PRONOUN ENGLISH NOTE SINGULAR io I Often dropped! (implied by verb) tu you (informal) Friends, family, young people lui / lei he / she lui = he, lei = she (Lei = formal "you") Lei you (formal) ⚠️ Capital L needed to distinguish! PLURAL noi / voi / loro we / you all / they
🔑 Key Rule: Pro-Drop Language
Italian is a "pro-drop" language — subject pronouns are usually omitted because the verb ending tells you who's doing the action. Sono italiano (not Io sono italiano) is perfectly natural. You'll mainly use pronouns for emphasis or contrast: "Io sono americano, e tu?" (I'm American, and YOU?)
⚙️ "Essere" (to be) — Present Tense (Presente)

This is an irregular verb — it doesn't follow normal patterns. Memorize it completely. You'll use it hundreds of times per day.

PronounItalianEnglishExample Sentence
io (I)sonoI amSono stanco. (I am tired.)
tu (you)seiyou areSei italiano? (Are you Italian?)
lui/lei (he/she)èhe/she isLei è professore. (She is a teacher.)
Lei (formal you)èyou areLei è di Roma? (Are you from Rome?)
noi (we)siamowe areSiamo amici. (We are friends.)
voi (you all)sieteyou all areSiete pronti? (Are you all ready?)
loro (they)sonothey areSono studenti. (They are students.)
⚠️ Watch out! Io sono and loro sono use the same form — "sono" means both "I am" AND "they are"! Context (and the pronoun if used) makes it clear.
ESSERE — Memory Map essere "to be" io sono tu sei noi siamo lui/lei/Lei è voi siete loro sono sono / sei / è ... IRREGULAR — memorize!
Using "essere" — Example Sentences
ItalianEnglish
Sono Marco.I am Marco.
Sei stanco?Are you tired?
È italiana.She is Italian.
Siamo a Roma.We are in Rome.
Sono studenti.They are students.
È bello!It is beautiful! / He is handsome!
Non sono pronto.I am not ready. (put non before verb to negate)
Making it Negative
Just put non (not) directly before the verb:
Sono italianoNon sono italiano.
Sei prontoNon sei pronto.
No extra words needed — simpler than English!
Making it a Question
Italian questions are formed by intonation — just raise your voice at the end (or move the subject):
Sei italiano? — Are you Italian? (same word order!)
È stanco lui? — Is he tired? (inverted, more emphasis)
06 🔢

Numbers 0–20

Italian numbers are mostly regular and very similar to other Romance languages. Learn these cold — you'll use them every day!

📝 Number Rules & Patterns
Pattern: 11–16
Numbers 11–16 follow the pattern: base number + -dici
undici (11) · dodici (12) · tredici (13) · quattordici (14) · quindici (15) · sedici (16)
Pattern: 17–19
Reversed! They follow dici- + base number (but note the spelling changes):
diciassette (17) = dici + a + sette · diciotto (18) = dici + otto · diciannove (19) = dici + a + nove
🎵 Memory trick: Say the numbers out loud in a rhythm — uno, due, tre, quattro, cinque, sei, sette, otto, nove, dieci. Repeat 5 times fast! Numbers are best learned through chanting.
07 💬

Full Dialogue Practice

Read these dialogues aloud. Pause after each line and try to understand without looking at the English. Then check!

🎭 SCENE 1 — Meeting at a Language School (Informal)
SOFIA
Ciao! Mi chiamo Sofia. Come ti chiami?
Hi! My name is Sofia. What's your name?
JAMES
Ciao Sofia! Sono James. Piacere!
Hi Sofia! I'm James. Nice to meet you!
SOFIA
Piacere mio! Di dove sei, James?
My pleasure! Where are you from, James?
JAMES
Sono di Londra. Sono inglese. E tu?
I'm from London. I'm English. And you?
SOFIA
Sono italiana! Sono di Firenze. Come stai?
I'm Italian! I'm from Florence. How are you?
JAMES
Benissimo, grazie! E tu?
Very well, thank you! And you?
SOFIA
Non c'è male! A presto, James!
Not bad! See you soon, James!
JAMES
Ciao ciao, Sofia!
Bye bye, Sofia!
🎭 SCENE 2 — At a Hotel Reception (Formal)
RECEPTIONIST
Buonasera! Benvenuto all'Hotel Roma. Come si chiama?
Good evening! Welcome to Hotel Roma. What is your name?
GUEST
Buonasera. Mi chiamo Martin. Martin Schmidt.
Good evening. My name is Martin. Martin Schmidt.
RECEPTIONIST
Di dov'è, signor Schmidt?
Where are you from, Mr. Schmidt?
GUEST
Sono tedesco. Vengo da Berlino.
I'm German. I come from Berlin.
RECEPTIONIST
Perfetto! Buona permanenza a Roma, signor Schmidt!
Perfect! Enjoy your stay in Rome, Mr. Schmidt!
GUEST
Grazie mille! Arrivederci.
Thank you very much! Goodbye.
🎙️Speaking Practice: Record yourself reading Dialogue 1 out loud. Play it back and compare to the pronunciation guide. Aim for smooth, musical intonation — Italian has a lovely rhythm!
08 🏛️

Cultural Notes: La Bella Figura

🇮🇹 Culture Spotlight: First Impressions

In Italy, making a good impression — fare una bella figura (literally "making a beautiful figure") — is deeply important. This concept shapes how Italians greet, dress, speak, and behave in public.

Italian Greeting Customs You Should Know
👋 Physical Greetings

Italians are physically demonstrative greetings! When meeting friends or family:

Due baci (two kisses): The most common greeting among friends — right cheek first, then left. Actually it's more of a "cheek-to-cheek air kiss." Don't make it awkward by going for the lips!

Handshake: Standard for formal/professional meetings.

Hug (abbraccio): Between close friends and family.

Regional variation: In some parts of northern Italy, a single kiss is common. In the south, sometimes three!

🕐 When to Say What

Buongiorno — Use from waking up until about 12–2pm

Buon pomeriggio — Rarely spoken; mostly on signs or in writing

Buonasera — Start using around 4–5pm and through the evening. Italians often use it earlier than you'd expect!

Buonanotte — Only when actually going to sleep or parting late at night

🎭 The Formal/Informal Divide

The tu/Lei distinction is very real and matters a lot in Italy. Using tu with a stranger or elder can be seen as rude or too forward.

Safe rule: Default to formal (Lei) with anyone you've just met who is over ~40 or in a professional role. They will often say "Dai, dammi del tu!" ("Go on, use tu with me!") when they're comfortable — and that's your invitation to relax.

Young people (under ~35) typically use tu immediately, even with strangers.

☕ Coffee Culture & Greetings

An Italian bar (café) is a place of social ritual. When you walk in, the barista will likely greet you with "Buongiorno!" and you respond the same. The espresso at the bar is the classic Italian morning ritual, often consumed standing up in under 3 minutes.

Ordering: "Un caffè, per favore." (A coffee, please.) This means an espresso — if you want an American-style coffee, say "un caffè americano."

09 ✏️

Exercises & Practice

Exercise 1 — Match the Greeting 🕐 Time of day → Greeting

Which greeting is most appropriate? Write the letter in the box.

A. Buongiorno  |  B. Buonasera  |  C. Ciao  |  D. Buonanotte

1. You walk into a shop at 9am:
2. You're texting your friend "hey!":
3. You meet your boss at 7pm:
4. You're heading to bed at midnight:
Show Answers

1. A — Buongiorno (9am = morning)

2. C — Ciao (friend = informal)

3. B — Buonasera (7pm = evening, boss = formal)

4. D — Buonanotte (going to sleep)

Exercise 2 — Conjugate "Essere" 📝

Fill in the correct form of essere:

1. Io Marco. (I am Marco.)
2. Tu italiano? (Are you Italian?)
3. Lei professoressa. (She is a teacher.)
4. Noi amici. (We are friends.)
5. Loro studenti. (They are students.)
6. Voi pronti? (Are you all ready?)
Show Answers

1. sonoIo sono Marco.

2. seiTu sei italiano?

3. èLei è professoressa.

4. siamoNoi siamo amici.

5. sonoLoro sono studenti.

6. sieteVoi siete pronti?

Exercise 3 — Translate to Italian 🌍
1. Good morning! (formal context)
2. My name is [your name].
3. I'm from [your city].
4. How are you? (to a friend)
5. Very well, thank you!
6. I'm not Italian.
7. Goodbye (formal).
8. Please and thank you.
Show Answers

1. Buongiorno!

2. Mi chiamo [nome]. / Sono [nome].

3. Sono di [città]. / Vengo da [città].

4. Come stai?

5. Benissimo, grazie!

6. Non sono italiano/a. (a = if you're female)

7. Arrivederci.

8. Per favore e grazie.

Exercise 4 — Numbers Challenge 🔢

Write the Italian word for each number:

7
13
18
4
20
11
Show Answers

7 → sette

13 → tredici

18 → diciotto

4 → quattro

20 → venti

11 → undici

🎙️ Exercise 5 — Speaking Prompts (Self-Study)

Say these out loud. Record yourself if possible!

1. Introduce yourself completely: name, nationality, where you're from
2. Greet a friend and ask how they are, then respond as them
3. Count from 1 to 20 without looking at the reference
4. Say the alphabet aloud — try to name one Italian word for each letter
5. Role-play Dialogue 1 by yourself, doing both parts
🃏 Quick-Review Flashcards

Tap each card to reveal the English meaning!

Ciao
Hi / Bye (informal)
Buongiorno
Good morning / Good day
Grazie
Thank you
Prego
You're welcome
Mi chiamo…
My name is…
Sono di…
I am from…
Come stai?
How are you? (informal)
Benissimo!
Very well / Wonderful!
Piacere
Nice to meet you
Arrivederci
Goodbye (formal)
Per favore
Please
Scusa
Excuse me (informal)
10 🗺️

Lesson Mind Map — Recap

LESSON 1 A1 Basics Alphabet 21 letters Phonetic rules C/G sounds Greetings Ciao · Salve Buongiorno/sera Formal vs Informal Introductions Mi chiamo… · Sono… Di dove sei? Grammar Subject pronouns essere (to be) Pro-drop language Numbers 0–20 uno · due · tre… Patterns 11–19 Culture Bella figura Kissing greetings Coffee culture Polite Phrases Grazie · Prego Scusa · Piacere Per favore · Mi dispiace Dialogues Informal meeting Hotel check-in Role-play practice
11 📚

Resources & Homework

🃏
Anki Flashcards
Free app. Search "Italian A1 vocabulary" — add today's words. Review 10 minutes daily using spaced repetition. ankiweb.net
🦉
Duolingo Italian
Great for habit building. Do 15 min/day on the Italian course — reinforces what we learn here. duolingo.com
📱
Tandem / HelloTalk
Language exchange apps — find Italian speakers learning your language. Even at A1 you can practice greetings!
🌐
ItalianPod101
Structured audio lessons with transcripts. Free tier available. Excellent for listening + pronunciation. italianpod101.com
📋 Tonight's Homework
  • Create an Anki deck and add all vocabulary from this lesson (or use a pre-made A1 deck)
  • Practice the alphabet — write each letter and say its sound out loud
  • Memorize the full conjugation of essere — quiz yourself 3 times without looking
  • Write a 5-sentence self-introduction in Italian using today's vocabulary
  • Count to 20 in Italian 3 times — out loud, in order, then random
🔑 Key Takeaways — What You Learned Today

Ottimo lavoro! 🎉 Excellent work!

You've completed Lesson 1 of your Italian journey. You can now greet people, introduce yourself, count to 20, and use the most important verb in Italian.

Lesson 2 will cover: Articles (il/la/un/una), Basic Nouns & Gender, the verb avere (to have), More Vocabulary, and Asking questions.

← Course HomeLesson 2 →
Buy me a coffee