🇮🇹 Italiano A1 · Lesson 2
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Complete Italian Course · A1

Lesson 2: Articles, Nouns & Avere

Definite & Indefinite Articles · Noun Gender & Plurals · Avere · Question Words · Numbers 21–100

CEFR Level A1Lesson 2 of ~8 at A1
🔁 Quick Review — Lesson 1

Warm up! Tap to reveal:

Sono stanco.
I am tired. (essere)
Come stai?
How are you? (informal)
sei
you are (tu — essere)
diciassette
17 — dici + a + sette
01🎯

Learning Objectives

By the end of Lesson 2 you will be able to:

Use all 7 definite articles (il/lo/la/l'/i/gli/le)
Use all 4 indefinite articles (un/uno/una/un')
Identify noun gender and make plurals
Conjugate avere (to have) in full
Know when to use essere vs avere
Ask questions with 7 question words
Count from 21 to 100
Order at an Italian café confidently
⏱️ Study time: ~3 hours. Articles and noun gender are the backbone of all Italian — take your time here. Everything else builds on this.
02📌

Definite Articles — "The"

English has one word for "the". Italian has seven, chosen by gender, number, and first letter of the noun that follows. There's a clear system — let's map it.

🔑 Why So Many?
Every Italian noun has a gender (masculine or feminine). Articles must agree with the noun in both gender and number. This agreement runs through all of Italian grammar, so mastering it now pays off enormously later.
Italian Definite Articles — THE MASCULINE FEMININE SINGULAR il most consonants il libro lo s+cons, z, gn, ps, x lo studente la all consonants la casa l' before any vowel (m+f) l'amico, l'amica PLURAL i most consonants i libri gli vowels, s+cons, z, gn gli amici, gli studenti le ALL feminine plurals — no exceptions! le case, le amiche KEY RULES: • Use lo/gli before: s + consonant, z, gn, ps, x, y, pn (lo studente, lo zaino, lo gnocco) • Use l' before ANY vowel for BOTH masculine and feminine singular nouns (l'amico, l'amica) • Feminine plural is ALWAYS le — even before vowels (le amiche, not gli amiche)
Complete Article Reference
ContextMasc. Sing.Masc. Pl.Fem. Sing.Fem. Pl.
Before most consonantsililale
Before s+cons, z, gn, ps, x…loglilale
Before a vowell'glil'le
💡 Memory shortcut: Feminine plural is always le. No exceptions, no special cases — just le, always.
Article Examples in Context
ItalianArticleEnglishWhy?
il libroilthe bookmasc., consonant L
lo studentelothe student (m)masc., ST (s+consonant)
l'amicol'the friend (m)masc., vowel A
la pizzalathe pizzafem., consonant P
l'amical'the friend (f)fem., vowel A
i libriithe booksmasc. pl., consonant L
gli studentiglithe studentsmasc. pl., s+cons
gli amiciglithe friends (m)masc. pl., vowel
le caselethe housesfem. plural — always le
03🔍

Indefinite Articles — "A / An"

Good news: indefinite articles are only singular (there's no plural "a/an"). Just four forms to learn, and they mirror the definite article pattern!

♂ Masculine
unbefore consonants
un libro, un cane
unobefore s+cons, z, gn…
uno studente, uno zaino
♀ Feminine
unabefore consonants
una pizza, una casa
un'before vowels
un'amica, un'isola
💡 Pattern alert: un mirrors il · uno mirrors lo · una mirrors la · un' mirrors l'. Learn one system, you know both!
⚠️ un vs un': Un (no apostrophe) is masculine. Un' (with apostrophe) is feminine before a vowel.
un amico (male friend — masc, no apostrophe)  |  ✅ un'amica (female friend — fem, apostrophe!)
04🏷️

Noun Gender & Plurals

Every Italian noun is masculine or feminine — even objects and abstract ideas. The ending usually tells you the gender and changes predictably in the plural.

♂ Masculine
Usually ends in -o → plural -i
il libroi libri
il gattoi gatti
il ragazzoi ragazzi
♀ Feminine
Usually ends in -a → plural -e
la casale case
la pizzale pizze
la ragazzale ragazze
Noun Ending Rules — Singular → Plural -o masc. singular -i masc. plural libro, gatto, anno libri, gatti, anni -a fem. singular -e fem. plural casa, pizza, amica case, pizze, amiche Nouns ending in -e → plural -i (both genders) il ristorante → i ristoranti | la notte → le notti
Special Cases
Nouns ending in -e (can be either gender)

Nouns ending in -e can be masculine OR feminine — you must memorise their gender. Plural always ends in -i.

SingularPluralEnglishGender
il ristorantei ristorantirestaurant(s)masc.
il nomei nominame(s)masc.
la nottele nottinight(s)fem.
la stazionele stazionistation(s)fem.
Invariable nouns (accented final vowel — never change!)

Nouns ending in a stressed accented vowel are the same in singular and plural:

la cittàle città  |  il caffèi caffè  |  l'universitàle università

Key irregular plurals
SingularPluralEnglish
l'uomogli uominiman / men
la manole manihand(s) — fem. despite -o!
🗂️ Essential A1 Nouns
Singular (+ article)PluralPhoneticEnglish
il libroi libriLEE-brohbook(s)
la casale caseKAH-zahhouse(s)
il ragazzo / la ragazzai ragazzi / le ragazzerah-GAH-tsohboy / girl
l'amico / l'amicagli amici / le amicheah-MEE-kohfriend m/f
lo studente / la studentessagli studenti / le studentessestoo-DEN-tehstudent m/f
il professore / la professoressai professori / le professoressepro-fes-SOH-rehteacher m/f
il caffèi caffèkaf-FEHcoffee(s)
la cittàle cittàchit-TAHcity/cities
il cane / il gattoi cani / i gattiKAH-neh / GAT-tohdog(s) / cat(s)
la scuolale scuoleSKWOH-lahschool(s)
il ristorantei ristorantiree-sto-RAN-tehrestaurant(s)
la macchinale macchineMAK-kee-nahcar(s)
05

Grammar: Avere — To Have

Avere is the second most important verb in Italian. It's irregular — memorise it completely. You'll also use it to express age, hunger, thirst and more.

⚙️ Avere — Present Tense
PronounFormEnglishExample
iohoI haveHo un cane.
tuhaiyou haveHai una sorella?
lui / lei / Leihahe/she/you haveHa vent'anni.
noiabbiamowe haveAbbiamo fame.
voiaveteyou all haveAvete tempo?
lorohannothey haveHanno una macchina.
⚠️ The H is always silent! Ho sounds like "o", hai like "eye", ha like "a", hanno like "anno" (year). The H exists only in writing — to distinguish from the words o (or), ai (to the), a (at/to), anno (year).
AVERE — Memory Map avere to have io ho tu hai lui/lei/Lei ha noi abbiamo voi avete loro hanno ⚠️ H is ALWAYS silent ho="o", hai="eye", ha="a"
🌟 Avere for Age & Physical States

Italian uses avere where English says "to be" — this surprises many learners!

Italian (avere)LiteralEnglish (to be)
Ho vent'anni.I have twenty years.I am twenty years old.
Ho fame.I have hunger.I am hungry.
Ho sete.I have thirst.I am thirsty.
Ho caldo / freddo.I have heat / cold.I am hot / cold.
Ho sonno.I have sleep.I am sleepy.
Ho paura.I have fear.I am afraid.
Ho fretta.I have hurry.I am in a hurry.
Ho ragione / torto.I have reason / wrong.I am right / wrong.
🎯 Key phrase: Quanti anni hai? — "How old are you?" (lit. how many years do you have?)  →  Ho [number] anni.
06⚖️

Avere vs Essere

ESSERE vs AVERE — When to Use Which essere (to be) avere (to have) ✓ Identity: Sono Marco. ✓ Nationality: Sono italiano. ✓ Origin: Sono di Roma. ✓ Profession: È medico. ✓ Description: È bello. ✓ Location: Siamo a Roma. ✓ Possession: Ho una macchina. ✓ Age: Ho trent'anni. ✓ Hunger/Thirst: Ho fame / sete. ✓ Temperature feel: Ho freddo. ✓ Right/Wrong: Ho ragione. ✓ Need: Ho bisogno di...
07

Question Words

These seven words unlock almost any question you'll ever need in Italian. Memorise them all — you'll use every one every day.

Chi?
kee
Who?
Chi sei? — Who are you?
Cosa?
KOH-zah
What?
Cosa hai? — What do you have?
Dove?
DOH-veh
Where?
Dov'è? — Where is it?
Quando?
KWAN-doh
When?
Quando hai fame?
Perché?
pehr-KEH
Why? / Because
Perché sei qui?
Come?
KOH-meh
How?
Come stai?
Quanto/i?
KWAN-toh
How much/many?
Quanti anni hai?
💡 Perché means both "why?" AND "because":
— Perché hai fame? — Perché non ho mangiato.
(Why are you hungry? — Because I haven't eaten.)
08🔢

Numbers 21–100

Once you know the tens, the system is almost fully regular. The only trick: drop the final vowel of the tens before -uno and -otto.

The Tens
🔑 The Drop Rule

Before uno (1) or otto (8), drop the final vowel of the ten:

venti + unoventuno  |  venti + ottoventotto

trenta + unotrentuno  |  quaranta + ottoquarantotto

21–30 (spot the pattern!)
Sample Numbers 31–100
09💬

Dialogues

Read these aloud. Notice how articles, nouns, avere, and question words work together in natural speech.

🎭 SCENE 1 — Al Bar (At a café)
BARISTA
Buongiorno! Cosa prende?
Good morning! What will you have?
CLIENTE
Buongiorno! Un caffè e un cornetto, per favore.
A coffee and a croissant, please.
BARISTA
Subito! Ha anche fame? Abbiamo dei panini freschi.
Right away! Are you also hungry? We have fresh sandwiches.
CLIENTE
No, grazie — ho solo sete. Ha dell'acqua minerale?
No thanks — I'm only thirsty. Do you have mineral water?
BARISTA
Certo! Naturale o frizzante?
Of course! Still or sparkling?
CLIENTE
Naturale, grazie. Quanto costa tutto?
Still, thanks. How much is everything?
BARISTA
Tre euro e cinquanta in tutto.
Three euros fifty in total.
CLIENTE
Ecco cinque euro. Grazie mille, arrivederci!
Here's five euros. Thank you very much, goodbye!
BARISTA
Prego! Buona giornata!
You're welcome! Have a good day!
📖 New vocabulary from Scene 1
ItalianEnglish
Cosa prende?What will you have? (formal; prendere = to take)
un cornettoa croissant (typical Italian breakfast pastry)
subitoright away, immediately
naturale / frizzantestill / sparkling (water)
in tuttoin total, altogether
il restothe change (money)
Buona giornata!Have a good day! (said when parting)
🎭 SCENE 2 — Due Studenti (Two Students)
GIULIA
Ciao! Sei uno studente nuovo?
Hi! Are you a new student?
LUCA
Sì, mi chiamo Luca. E tu?
Yes, my name is Luca. And you?
GIULIA
Sono Giulia. Quanti anni hai, Luca?
I'm Giulia. How old are you, Luca?
LUCA
Ho ventidue anni. E tu?
I'm twenty-two. And you?
GIULIA
Ho vent'anni. Hai un libro di italiano?
I'm twenty. Do you have an Italian book?
LUCA
Sì, ho il libro e anche un dizionario. Abbiamo una buona professoressa?
Yes, I have the book and a dictionary too. Do we have a good teacher?
GIULIA
Sì! La professoressa Marini è bravissima!
Yes! Professor Marini is excellent!
10

Cultural Notes: Il Bar Italiano

🇮🇹 Culture Spotlight

The Italian bar is nothing like an English pub. It's the social heart of everyday life — open from early morning for espresso and cornetti, through lunch, and into the evening for aperitivo. Italians typically stand at the counter (al banco), drink their espresso in under two minutes, and leave. It's cheaper to stand than to sit at a table!

What to Order
ItalianEnglishNote
un caffèan espresso"Coffee" in Italy = espresso by default
un cappuccinoa cappuccinoBreakfast only — Italians never drink it after 11am!
un caffè macchiatoespresso + drop of milkGentler than a straight espresso
un caffè americanolong / drip coffeeFor those who find espresso too strong
un cornettoItalian croissantOften filled with cream, jam or chocolate
un aperitivoan aperitifPre-dinner drink (Aperol Spritz, Negroni…) often with free snacks
☕ The cappuccino rule — why it matters

Ordering a cappuccino after 11am or after a meal is one of the most recognisable tourist mistakes in Italy. Italians believe milk is heavy and interferes with digestion after food. They won't refuse to make one — but they will notice. After meals: always order un caffè (espresso).

💶 How to pay at a bar

At a traditional bar, pay first at the cassa (till), get your receipt (lo scontrino), then hand it to the barista. In tourist areas you usually pay at the end. When unsure, watch what others do.

Vorrei un caffè, per favore. — I'd like a coffee, please.
Quanto costa? — How much does it cost?
Il conto, per favore. — The bill, please.

11✏️

Exercises & Practice

Exercise 1 — Choose the Correct Definite Article 📌

Fill in: il / lo / la / l' / i / gli / le

1. libro (masc., L)
2. amica (fem., vowel)
3. studente (masc., ST)
4. case (fem. plural)
5. zaino (masc., Z)
6. amici (masc. pl., vowel)
7. pizza (fem., P)
8. studenti (masc. pl., ST)
Show Answers

1. il   2. l'   3. lo   4. le

5. lo   6. gli   7. la   8. gli

Exercise 2 — Indefinite Articles 🔍

Fill in: un / uno / una / un'

1. caffè (masc., C)
2. amica (fem., vowel)
3. studente (masc., ST)
4. pizza (fem., P)
5. uomo (masc., vowel)
6. università (fem., vowel)
Show Answers

1. un   2. un'   3. uno   4. una

5. un (masc.!)   6. un' (fem. + vowel)

Exercise 3 — Make it Plural 🔄

Change article + noun to plural:

1. il gatto →
2. la ragazza →
3. lo studente →
4. l'amico →
5. il ristorante →
6. la città →
Show Answers

1. i gatti

2. le ragazze

3. gli studenti

4. gli amici

5. i ristoranti

6. le città (invariable — same as singular!)

Exercise 4 — Conjugate Avere ✋
1. Io fame. (I'm hungry.)
2. Tu un cane? (Do you have a dog?)
3. Lei trent'anni. (She is 30.)
4. Noi sete. (We're thirsty.)
5. Voi una macchina? (Do you all have a car?)
6. Loro freddo. (They're cold.)
Show Answers

1. ho   2. hai   3. ha

4. abbiamo   5. avete   6. hanno

Exercise 5 — Essere or Avere? ⚖️

Choose the right verb and conjugate it:

1. Marco italiano.
2. Io venticinque anni.
3. Noi a Milano.
4. Tu una sorella?
5. Loro studenti.
6. Voi ragione.
Show Answers

1. è (essere — nationality)

2. ho (avere — age)

3. siamo (essere — location)

4. hai (avere — possession)

5. sono (essere — identity)

6. avete (avere — avere ragione)

Exercise 6 — Question Words ❓

Fill in: chi / cosa / dove / quando / perché / come / quanto / quanti

1. anni hai?
2. sei? (where)
3. costa il caffè?
4. è quella ragazza?
5. hai fame?
6. stai?
Show Answers

1. Quanti   2. Dove   3. Quanto

4. Chi   5. Perché   6. Come

Exercise 7 — Translate to Italian 🌍
1. I have a dog and a cat.
2. She is 30 years old.
3. We are thirsty.
4. Do you (informal) have a book?
5. The students are at school.
6. How much does the water cost?
Show Answers

1. Ho un cane e un gatto.

2. Ha trent'anni.

3. Abbiamo sete.

4. Hai un libro?

5. Gli studenti sono a scuola.

6. Quanto costa l'acqua?

🎙️ Exercise 8 — Speaking Prompts
1. Say 5 things you have: Ho un/una…
2. Say your age: Ho ___ anni.
3. Order breakfast at an Italian bar out loud
4. Count from 21 to 50 without looking
5. Role-play Scene 2 using your own name and real details
12🗺️

Lesson Mind Map

LESSON 2 A1 Grammar Articles il/lo/la/l' i/gli/le un/uno/una/un' Noun Gender -o → -i (masc.) -a → -e (fem.) -e → -i (both) Avere ho/hai/ha abbiamo/avete/hanno age · hunger · possession Avere vs Essere essere: identity/place avere: possession/age Ho fame ≠ Sono affamato Question Words chi · cosa · dove quando · perché come · quanto/quanti Numbers 21–100 venti…cento drop vowel + uno/otto ventuno · ventotto Culture: Il Bar Stand at the counter No cappuccino after 11am! Pay first → lo scontrino Dialogues At a café (ordering) Real vocab in context
13🃏

Quick-Review Flashcards

Tap each card to reveal the answer. Works on all devices!

il / i
the (masc.) — before most consonants
lo / gli
the (masc.) — before s+cons, z, gn / vowels (pl.)
la / le
the (fem.) singular / plural
l'
the (masc. OR fem.) — before any vowel, singular
un / uno
a/an (masc.) — consonants / s+cons, z, gn
una / un'
a/an (fem.) — consonants / vowels
Ho fame.
I am hungry. (avere — not essere!)
Quanti anni hai?
How old are you? (lit. how many years do you have?)
ho/hai/ha
I have / you have / he·she has
abbiamo/avete/hanno
we have / you all have / they have
Dov'è?
Where is it/he/she? (dove + è = dov'è)
-o → ?   -a → ?
-o → -i (masc. plural)  |  -a → -e (fem. plural)
ventuno / ventotto
21 / 28 — venti drops -i before uno and otto
Quanto costa?
How much does it cost?
Ho ragione.
I am right. (always avere — never essere!)
lo scontrino
the receipt — pay first at Italian bars!
14📚

Resources & Homework

🃏
Anki — Articles Deck
Add all 7 definite + 4 indefinite articles with example nouns. Drill until automatic. 10 min/day.
✍️
Writing Practice
Write 10 sentences: things you have (Ho…), where you are (Sono a…), your age (Ho ___ anni).
🔢
Number Drill
Set a 2-minute timer. Count in Italian as high as you can. Repeat daily. Try to reach 100 by end of week.
Cultural Immersion
Watch a YouTube video of someone ordering at an Italian bar. Notice the speed, vocabulary, and customs.
📋 Tonight's Homework
  • Add Lesson 2 vocabulary to Anki — especially articles with example nouns
  • Memorise avere conjugation — quiz yourself 3× without looking
  • Write 5 sentences using avere for states (hunger, age, cold, etc.)
  • Practice making 10 nouns plural (pick any from today's list)
  • Count from 21 to 100 — tens first, then fill in all the numbers
  • Role-play the café scene aloud, playing both characters
🔑 Key Takeaways — What You Learned Today

Bravissimo/a! 🎉

You've mastered Italian's core noun-article system and two of its most important verbs. Every sentence you'll ever speak in Italian uses what you learned in Lessons 1 and 2.

Lesson 3 will cover: Regular -are verbs (parlare, mangiare, studiare…), adverbs of frequency, telling the time, days of the week, and describing your daily routine.

← Lesson 1Lesson 3 →
Buy me a coffee