🇮🇹 Italiano · Lesson 25
B2 Progress
Lesson 25Lesson 26Lesson 27Lesson 28Lesson 29Lesson 30Lesson 31Lesson 32
Complete Italian Course · B2

Lesson 25: Il Gerundio (Semplice e Composto)

Stavo + gerundio for actions in progress · Pur + gerundio for concession · Cause, means, and condition without a connector · Gerundio vs infinitive after verbs of perception

CEFR Level B2B2 · Lesson 1 of 8
01🎯

Learning Objectives

By the end of this lesson you will be able to:

Form the gerundio semplice for -are, -ere, and -ire verbs, including the irregulars
Build and use the gerundio composto to express an action completed before another
Use pur + gerundio to express concession without nonostante or benché
Choose correctly between the gerundio and the infinitive after verbs like vedere and sentire
⏱️ Study time: ~2.5 hours. The gerundio is compact and elegant once it clicks — most of the work here is training your ear to recognize the constructions in reading and native speech.
02🔧

Forming the Gerundio Semplice

You've seen the gerundio already, tucked inside the present progressive (sto parlando). At B2 it's time to treat it as a structure in its own right — it does far more work in Italian than a quick English translation suggests.

🔑 The Formation Rule

-are verbs take -ando: parlare → parlando. -ere and -ire verbs both take -endo: credere → credendo, dormire → dormendo. Unlike almost every other Italian tense, the gerundio has only one form per verb — no person, no number.

Gerundio Semplice — Regular Verbs
InfinitiveGerundioMeaning
parlareparlandospeaking / by speaking
crederecredendobelieving / by believing
dormiredormendosleeping / by sleeping
finirefinendofinishing / by finishing
Irregular Gerundi

A handful of verbs use their old Latin stem instead of the infinitive stem — the same stems that produce the imperfetto's irregular forms.

InfinitiveGerundioStem note
farefacendofrom facere
diredicendofrom dicere
berebevendofrom bevere
porreponendofrom ponere
tradurretraducendofrom traducere
💡 Reflexive verbs attach the pronoun to the end of the gerundio when there's no auxiliary: alzandomi (as I get up), or place it before stare in the progressive: mi sto alzando / sto alzandomi — both correct.
⚠️ The gerundio is invariable — it never agrees with gender or number, even when its implied subject is feminine or plural: Le ragazze, camminando verso casa, hanno visto un incidente. (camminando stays exactly the same.)
03

Il Gerundio Composto

Just as the passato prossimo pairs avere/essere with a participio, the gerundio composto pairs the gerundio of avere or essere with the participio passato — and it places the action clearly before the main clause's action.

🔑 Formation

avendo / essendo + participio passato. Choose the same auxiliary the verb would normally take in the passato prossimo, and make the participio agree with essere-verbs exactly as usual.

VerbGerundio compostoMeaning
finireavendo finitohaving finished
arrivareessendo arrivato/a/i/ehaving arrived
svegliarsiessendosi svegliato/a/i/ehaving woken up
Gerundio Semplice vs Composto — Timing

Vedendo il temporale, siamo tornati a casa. (Seeing the storm — at the same time as returning, we saw it and reacted) vs Avendo visto il temporale, siamo tornati a casa. (Having seen the storm — the seeing is clearly finished before the returning happened). Both are correct; the composto just makes the sequence unambiguous.

💡 In practice, native speakers often use the gerundio semplice even when strict sequencing would call for the composto, especially in speech — but in formal writing, the composto is preferred whenever the two actions aren't simultaneous.
04🕰️

Stavo + Gerundio: Actions in Progress in the Past

You already know sto parlando for "I am speaking" right now. The imperfetto of stare + gerundio gives you the exact past equivalent — an action genuinely in progress at a specific past moment, often interrupted.

Pronounstare (imperfetto)+ gerundio
iostavostavo parlando
tustavistavi parlando
lui/leistavastava parlando
noistavamostavamo parlando
voistavatestavate parlando
lorostavanostavano parlando
🔑 Stavo + Gerundio vs Imperfetto Alone

The plain imperfetto (parlavo) can mean "I spoke habitually" or "I was speaking" depending on context. Stavo parlando removes that ambiguity — it can only mean "I was in the middle of speaking," which is exactly why it's the natural choice when a second action interrupts: Stavo parlando al telefono quando è caduta la linea. (I was talking on the phone when the line dropped.)

💡 This is one of the cleanest B1→B2 upgrades available: anywhere you'd say "was/were -ing" in English about an interrupted action, reach for stavo/stavi/stava + gerundio instead of the plain imperfetto.
05⚖️

Pur + Gerundio: Concession

You learned nonostante and benché + congiuntivo at B1 for "although." Pur + gerundio expresses the identical idea more compactly — no subordinate clause, no congiuntivo, and it reads as noticeably more literary.

🔑 Pur + Gerundio = Although + -ing

Pur essendo stanco, ha continuato a lavorare. (Although being tired / Even though tired, he kept working.) This only works when the subject of the concession and the subject of the main clause are the same person — exactly like the same-subject rule you learned for di + infinitive at B1.

Pur + gerundioEquivalent with nonostante/benché
Pur sapendo la verità, non ha detto nulla.Nonostante sapesse la verità, non ha detto nulla.
Pur avendo poco tempo, mi ha aiutato.Benché avesse poco tempo, mi ha aiutato.
Pur essendo d'accordo, ho sollevato un dubbio.Anche se ero d'accordo, ho sollevato un dubbio.
⚠️ Different subjects in the two clauses? Pur + gerundio doesn't work — you must fall back to nonostante/benché + congiuntivo: Nonostante Marco fosse stanco, io ho continuato a parlare cannot become a pur-construction, because the tired person and the one continuing are different people.
06🔗

Gerundio for Cause, Means & Condition — No Connector Needed

This is the gerundio's real superpower: a single word, with no connector at all, can silently mean "because," "by," or "if" — the exact relationship is inferred entirely from context.

FunctionExampleUnpacked meaning
CauseSentendosi male, è tornato a casa.Because he felt sick, he went home.
MeansHa imparato l'italiano guardando film.He learned Italian by watching films.
ConditionStudiando di più, supereresti l'esame.If you studied more, you'd pass the exam.
Time (while)Camminando, abbiamo parlato di lavoro.While walking, we talked about work.
🔑 How to Read an Ambiguous Gerundio

Ask what relationship makes sense between the gerundio clause and the main clause. If the main clause is a consequence, it's usually cause. If the main clause describes a method being used, it's means. If the main clause is hypothetical or conditional in meaning, it's condition. Native speakers do this instinctively — you'll get there with exposure.

💡 This construction is a favorite in written Italian — newspaper articles and formal reports lean on it constantly because it's more economical than spelling out perché, tramite, or se every time.
07👁️

Gerundio vs Infinitive After Verbs of Perception

Verbs like vedere, sentire, guardare, and ascoltare can be followed by either the infinitive or the gerundio when describing someone doing something — and the choice subtly changes what you're claiming to have perceived.

🔑 Infinitive = Whole Action; Gerundio = Action in Progress

Ho visto Marco attraversare la strada (I saw Marco cross the street — the complete action, start to finish) vs Ho visto Marco che attraversava la strada or, more literarily, Ho visto Marco attraversando la strada (I saw Marco while he was crossing — you only caught part of it, mid-action).

Perception verb + infinitivePerception verb + che + imperfetto (most common in speech)
L'ho sentito cantare tutta la canzone.L'ho sentito che cantava tutta la canzone.
Li ho visti litigare per ore.Li ho visti che litigavano per ore.
⚠️ In everyday spoken Italian, the che + imperfetto pattern (vedere qualcuno che faceva qualcosa) is actually far more common than the pure gerundio after perception verbs — the gerundio version belongs more to formal writing. Recognize both; lean on che + imperfetto when speaking.
08🗣️

Dialogues

Scene 1 — Explaining an Interruption
CHIARA
Stavo studiando per l'esame quando mi ha chiamato mia sorella, tutta agitata.
I was studying for the exam when my sister called me, all worked up.
DAVIDE
Cosa è successo? Pur avendo tanto da fare tu, immagino tu l'abbia ascoltata comunque.
What happened? Even with so much to do, I imagine you listened to her anyway.
CHIARA
Certo. Parlandole, ho capito che non era niente di grave — solo un brutto litigio col suo capo.
Of course. Talking to her, I understood it wasn't anything serious — just a bad argument with her boss.
Scene 2 — A Story Told in Sequence
NONNO
Avendo finito la scuola a quattordici anni, tuo bisnonno cominciò subito a lavorare in fabbrica.
Having finished school at fourteen, your great-grandfather started working in the factory right away.
MATTIA
Pur essendo così giovane? Mi sembra incredibile, oggi.
Even being so young? It seems incredible to me, today.
NONNO
Erano altri tempi. Camminando ogni giorno due ore per arrivarci, imparò anche a essere paziente.
Those were different times. Walking two hours every day to get there, he also learned to be patient.
Scene 3 — Giving Directions the Efficient Way
TURISTA
Scusi, come arrivo alla stazione da qui?
Excuse me, how do I get to the station from here?
SIGNORA
Proseguendo dritto per questa via, arriva a una piazza; girando a sinistra lì, la vedrà subito.
Continuing straight down this street, you'll reach a square; turning left there, you'll see it right away.
TURISTA
Perfetto, grazie mille! Detto così sembra semplicissimo.
Perfect, thank you so much! Said like that it sounds really simple.
09🇮🇹

Cultural Notes: The Efficiency of the Gerundio

Why Italian Loves the Gerundio

Italian journalism, legal writing, and literature all lean on the gerundio far more heavily than everyday conversation does, precisely because it compresses a full subordinate clause — with its own connector and conjugated verb — into a single unchanging word. A news report can pack cause, sequence, and consequence into one dense sentence: Avendo perso le elezioni, il partito ha annunciato una revisione della strategia, puntando su nuovi candidati.

In spoken Italian, though, people reach for the gerundio far less — che + a normal conjugated verb usually feels more natural. Recognizing the gerundio fluently in what you read and hear, while using it more selectively yourself, is exactly the right B2 balance.

10✏️

Exercises & Practice

Exercise 1 🔧
1. (parlare) , ha convinto tutti.
2. (finire) il gerundio composto di questo verbo: presto, siamo usciti.
3. (dire) la verità è più facile che (fare) finta di niente.
Show Answers

1. Parlando   2. Avendo finito   3. Dicendo / facendo

Exercise 2 — Stavo + Gerundio 🕰️
1. Io (stare - dormire) quando è suonato il telefono.
2. Loro (stare - mangiare) quando siamo arrivati.
Show Answers

1. stavo dormendo   2. stavano mangiando

Exercise 3 — Pur + Gerundio ⚖️
1. Rewrite with pur + gerundio: Nonostante fosse stanca, è venuta alla festa.
2. Rewrite with pur + gerundio: Benché non avessi soldi, ho comprato il regalo.
Show Answers

1. Pur essendo stanca, è venuta alla festa.

2. Pur non avendo soldi, ho comprato il regalo.

Exercise 4 — Free Writing ✍️

Write 4–5 sentences describing your morning routine, using at least one gerundio semplice for a simultaneous action, one gerundio composto, and one pur + gerundio.

11🗺️

Lesson Mind Map

LESSON 25 Il Gerundio Semplice e Composto Gerundio Semplice -ando / -endo facendo, dicendo, bevendo Gerundio Composto avendo/essendo + participio action before main clause Stavo + Gerundio past progressive interrupted actions Pur + Gerundio concession, same subject = nonostante + cong. Cause/Means/Condition no connector needed perché, tramite, se Perception Verbs vedere/sentire + ger. action mid-progress Dialogues interrupted study session grandfather's story Culture: Compression journalism & legal writing one word = one clause
12🃏

Quick-Review Flashcards

Tap to reveal:

parlando
speaking / by speaking — gerundio semplice of parlare
avendo finito
having finished — gerundio composto
stavo dormendo
I was sleeping — imperfetto of stare + gerundio
pur essendo stanco
even though tired — concession, same subject only
facendo
doing/making — irregular gerundio of fare
sentendosi male
feeling sick (as cause) — gerundio with no connector
l'ho visto attraversare
I saw him cross — infinitive = whole action
dicendo
saying — irregular gerundio of dire
13📚

Resources & Homework

🃏
Anki — Gerundio Forms
Build a deck with all irregular gerundi (facendo, dicendo, bevendo, ponendo, traducendo) plus 10 example sentences.
📰
Read One News Article
Find an Italian news article online and underline every gerundio you spot — count how many are cause/means/condition vs simultaneous time.
🗣️
Narrate Your Day
Record yourself narrating your morning using at least 3 different gerundio constructions from this lesson.
📋 Tonight's Homework
  • Conjugate the gerundio semplice and composto for 8 verbs of your choice, including at least 2 irregulars
  • Write 5 sentences using pur + gerundio, checking that the subject is the same in both clauses each time
  • Rewrite 3 English sentences with 'while/because/by + -ing' using the Italian gerundio with no connector
🔑 Key Takeaways — What You Learned Today

Ottimo lavoro! 🎉

The gerundio is one of B2's most elegant tools — a single word doing the work of an entire subordinate clause. You'll start noticing it constantly in anything you read.

Lesson 26 takes you into the passato remoto — Italian's literary narrative past, essential for reading novels, fairy tales, and formal narration even if you rarely produce it yourself in speech.

← B2 HomeLesson 26 →
Buy me a coffee