Ma perché non impara? Sembri giovane, è una opportunità meravigliosa. Posso fomentarti ad imparare. Cioè, che impari con questo video. Dunque ora avrò bisogno di prendermi cura dei miei affari.
This is huge. I'm not understanding everything the first time through, as I am still a new learner. But it's great to hear practical conversations and I continue to understand more and more as time goes on.
This is amazing. Finally, the ability to hear and understand "what" is being said. I've learned thousands of words but it never helped me with a two way conversation. Thank you!
Italian is one of the best languages for this reason: you don't need to struggle with all those sounds like English or Chinese for example, everything is "written as you read it". Is simple. I always laugh when English speaker read my name, they always read it "Matio Bordoni" but it's literally just Mattia Bordone.
Thank you! I appreciate that the English isn’t disturbing in between every sentence! and that’s it’s not too repetitive stretching out and over-pronouncing three times per sentence and instead much more natural. Thank you soooooo much!!!
Excellent. You give us a real chance to practice listening to real conversations. And then check our understanding with the following subtitles. Thank you.
Brovo! Questo e fantastico! This is how everyone else should make their language tutorials. No spending all your time looking up the words you don't know yet. Seriously, nicely done! Thank you!
This video is excellent!! I would like to know where their accents are from (which region in Italy). From my very limited perspective, the girl sounds very Italian and the guy somewhat Brazilian 😆
Excellent Resource. I can thoroughly recommend it. People that say the texts are too fast would also do well to realize that it wouldn't seem that way if the same people thought quicker. Failing that they can reduce the speed to 75% or 50% and for god's sake stop moaning, learning a language takes time, patience and persistence.
Molto utile. Please don't waste your time reading the negative comments as it is just a waste of time. Just try to understand the context and how Italians speak and not how English is spoken. It is not meant to be a literal translation. The subtitles are probably auto generated and just a guide.
This is my first month listening to these conversations and I can start to see the development of my understanding of the Italian Language. I'm only a beginner but not an absolute beginner.
This is actually amazing lol it's so hard to find a channel that has consistently good material to practice listening with. If possible, can future comprehensions include different dialects!? Please make loads more because they're great! Thanks!
Fantastico! Exactly what I was looking for. In class we speak so slowly, I wanted to hear something closer to a regular speed. It's OK not to get everything. Just let it wash over you and enjoy the rhythm and pick up what you can. Pratica, pratica!!
Love this, so useful! Just one question, when the speaker and Italian text both say "Quando siete aperti oggi?", Why do the English subtitles say "When do you close today?" Aperti means open right?
I speak Spanish and it helps me a lot now I'm learning Italian. I can understand the pronunciation and many words! Same with Portuguese which is my next target language
@@Itachi86Uchiha Personnally, I think that italian is closer to french than spanish. Of course it might look like spanish because ok the rolled r, but italian and french share way more cognates than italian and spanish do.
This is incredible. Real-life native-speaker dialogs at normal speed! I only wish there was a way to break these up, so I can listen to them over and over, without guessing where they start, because the video is so compressed. I've already learned a lot. Thanks!
1:51 he said only “Ok” subtitle was “Ok, thank you” 2:21 he said in italian “it was really a beautiful day” not it was not bad 3:40 he said in italian “which one do you think looks better” he didn’t say “shirt” at all. My point is as new learner for new language we really need to know the exact translation and what did they say and what they didn’t, so we can do our analysis and understand it better, to not get confuse. Thank you for the videos, it’s really helpful but it’s need to be reviewed again. Grazie 😊
Using literal language can mess up a little. they are writing what these words are translated into english, but yes their meaning and context in english
Complimenti per questo video è così spettacolo. Sono in Italia da due anni ora, io capisco tante cose quando qualcuno mi dice qualcosa in italiano. Ma è difficile per rispondere però non lo so come giunto le parole. Ho trovato questo video cinque giorni fa e adesso io miglio di primo. Grazie al voi!
@@lucaarmato Il bello dello spagnolo (altra lingua che ho imparato negli anni) è che non raddoppia le consonanti come l'italiano, quindi a differenza dello spagnolo è difficile per gli stranieri saper scrivere correttamente l'italiano. Probabilmente ho sbagliato a scrivere 'raddoppiato', ma non preoccuparti, sono sicuro che c'è qualche persona appassionata là fuori che lo 'correggerà' o 'coregerrà' per me!
1:42 is it correct that "Pronto" translates to "Hello"? I cross-referenced to other sources and they only translated the word to "quick, prompt, speedy". Would appreciate any help! :)
Mi è piaciuto molto questo video! Posso ascoltare mentre faccio un'altra cosa Me sembra davvero utile per sviluppare il nostro italiano Grazie mille! Saluto dal Brasile!
Okay so then a 2 hour listening exercise becomes a four hour one, how about just make the audio right the first time. If they didn't make crappy audio that's so unintelligible in the first place it would be quite easy to listen to normal speed italian. Whoever was speaking in these audio lessons should have been aware they were talking to begginer students of italian why would you speak so fast like your in a race and have to finish talking as soon as possible because you need to go to the toilet before you explode.
@@benjamin7627 For me it was perfect because I'm not interested in what they say but how an italian native speaker would say it. If they simply read it out, slowly and how it's written, you would not be able to train your listening skill.
@ 1.44 the Italian text asks 'When are you open today?' The English subtitle reads 'What time do you close today', which would be Che tempo siete chiuso oggi?
Io ho cominciato a studiare l’italiano nel liceo e ho potuto imparare molto veloce perché parlava spagnolo a casa. La grammatica e le coniugazioni sono un po’ diversi ma molte parole sono simili.
At 3:13 the girl doesn't pronounce the word 'due' properly ('Alle due in punto'). It could be a dialect thing or something. But that aside, thanks a million for everything you are doing for us!!! 💖
Ho imparato molto cose da questa video, tutti conversazioni in questa video sono utile e utilizzabile . le parole e le frasi sono stati usati in modi grammaticale per tutti i livelli. è utile più per il livello A2 e B1. Grazie mille per la vostra Video informativo.
I have been trying for 15 months now to learn some Italian, giving it, I would say, on average, close to an hour, 6 days a week, using online tools, videos and also studying grammar, like conjugation and similar things, on my own. I am a little old for this now (61), so I understood going in that my learning would be limited. Still, I was disciplined. I can now read a little simple Italian, but I still need to regularly resort to a dictionary unless I read something short over and over. And listening? Hah. I tested myself with this video, which certainly uses simple sentences, and I can comprehend almost nothing, literally nothing that is said by the fluent speakers, just as if I never studied, unless I read along at the same time. Speaking and writing something myself? I am painstakingly slow. I must think out each word and can't seem to write even one sentence without a mistake. Word order and using prepositions correctly are beyond me. This is a little disappointing in one sense, but, not surprising. I realize that if I had not taken French in high school (not that I was a good student), it would be much worse, probably impossible to have gotten even as far as I have. I have tried, as suggested, to just let it flow without stopping to look up words or to read, but when I do that, it seems a complete waste of time as I understand virtually nothing, just a stray word here or there. I am not trying to dissuade anyone from trying. I still enjoy it and just being able to read a little has its value. I have come to the conclusion that for me, immersion would possibly be the only way I could become even remotely fluent, and that is definitely not happening. I suspect it is true for most everyone over, say, 30-40, getting progressively harder as age increases. Best to learn when you are young. There are always exceptions, of course.
David, I don't know if you will see this as you wrote over a year ago - but my experience is almost identical. I'm actually 73, and have been having weekly lessons for two years. I have good French and some facility with language generally. But my Italian is not really improving. I can understand most written material, but spoken, niente! Well, a few words here and there. I'm sure it is only a question of familiarity with the way words are run together in speech and am trying to psych myself up to go and do a week or two's immersive course in lovely Bologna, but am a bit nervous. As you say, it's great even to understand the language in written form, but I'd still like to have a simple conversation!
@@janchamier3368 Good for you, Jan. I'm a year further along in my own practice then from when I wrote that, but the same limitations are there in terms of processing and speed. For myself, even writing is so slow and I still always make so many mistakes, that I can't even imagine a conversation. I'm just happy that when I read a novel and someone says something in Italian or French, I can usually read it. But, I would love to hear from you how your immersion experience goes. In bocca a lupo.
Hi David! U left this message a year ago and I don’t know if u are still studying Italian these days. In case u do, there is a podcast called “coffee break Italian”. U can listen to it on your phone or computer, etc. the lessons started very basic and the host repeats and explains every thing in detail. Then the lessons gradually progress. I think this podcast is a great start for beginner listeners with some Italian language knowledge. It definitely helped me!
As a Spanish speaker I can some what keep up with their conversation. But I found it hard when they speak fast. Written Italian is difficult for me since I can’t read Spanish well
bit.ly/3Iq6fGt Click here and get the best resources online to master Italian grammar and improve your vocabulary with tons of content for FREE!
I don’t understand Italian, i just came here to bless my ears with this beautiful language
This should be the best start... ;-)
So many rrrrrrr sounds
Ma perché non impara? Sembri giovane, è una opportunità meravigliosa. Posso fomentarti ad imparare. Cioè, che impari con questo video. Dunque ora avrò bisogno di prendermi cura dei miei affari.
@@kwanryan5914 That's how we rrrrrrrroll.
@@kwanryan5914 that's one of my favorite part about Italian.
This is huge. I'm not understanding everything the first time through, as I am still a new learner. But it's great to hear practical conversations and I continue to understand more and more as time goes on.
I love these conversations and bless all the people who made it!Thank you!This is the way i like to learn!
This is amazing. Finally, the ability to hear and understand "what" is being said. I've learned thousands of words but it never helped me with a two way conversation. Thank you!
Italian is one of the best languages for this reason: you don't need to struggle with all those sounds like English or Chinese for example, everything is "written as you read it". Is simple.
I always laugh when English speaker read my name, they always read it "Matio Bordoni" but it's literally just Mattia Bordone.
@@triggeredravioli নন
ণণ
@@triggeredravioli নণ
ননণ
Thank you! I appreciate that the English isn’t disturbing in between every sentence! and that’s it’s not too repetitive stretching out and over-pronouncing three times per sentence and instead much more natural. Thank you soooooo much!!!
Excellent. You give us a real chance to practice listening to real conversations. And then check our understanding with the following subtitles. Thank you.
At last!! I can hear Italian spoken as Italians speak it. The rhythm, the inflections, the nuances. What a great help this is. Grazie.
Brovo! Questo e fantastico! This is how everyone else should make their language tutorials. No spending all your time looking up the words you don't know yet. Seriously, nicely done! Thank you!
This video is excellent!! I would like to know where their accents are from (which region in Italy). From my very limited perspective, the girl sounds very Italian and the guy somewhat Brazilian 😆
Excellent Resource. I can thoroughly recommend it. People that say the texts are too fast would also do well to realize that it wouldn't seem that way if the same people thought quicker. Failing that they can reduce the speed to 75% or 50% and for god's sake stop moaning, learning a language takes time, patience and persistence.
Wow I can speak italian!
I'm from Milan...
That's a good one!!! 😂😂😂
Come hai fatto😂😂
Me too lol
Nice
Master junket vai a Napoli che loro sono esperti e possono darti una mano con italiano
Molto utile. Please don't waste your time reading the negative comments as it is just a waste of time. Just try to understand the context and how Italians speak and not how English is spoken. It is not meant to be a literal translation. The subtitles are probably auto generated and just a guide.
This is my first month listening to these conversations and I can start to see the development of my understanding of the Italian Language. I'm only a beginner but not an absolute beginner.
Il miglior corso di italiano online!! Grazie! Great practice to refresh your Italian and learn new. Thank you!
This is actually amazing lol it's so hard to find a channel that has consistently good material to practice listening with.
If possible, can future comprehensions include different dialects!? Please make loads more because they're great! Thanks!
This was the part I'm missing from distance learning. This is so excellant, molte grazie!!
Questo é il video piú utile per imparare l'italiano che abbia mai visto! Complimenti e grazie!!!
This is the best way to start learning the language.
Though, I must say as I know decent Spanish and French I had head start in Italian.
queste conversazioni sono molto utili. Ora riesco a capire molte altre conversazioni. Grazie mille !
Nice sharing, ! God bless you !👍🏼🙏❤
Fantastico! Exactly what I was looking for. In class we speak so slowly, I wanted to hear something closer to a regular speed. It's OK not to get everything. Just let it wash over you and enjoy the rhythm and pick up what you can. Pratica, pratica!!
I like it really it's amazing I can hear very well. Well done guys
Great 👍🏻. With this teaching, i am improving in Italian language.
Love this, so useful! Just one question, when the speaker and Italian text both say "Quando siete aperti oggi?", Why do the English subtitles say "When do you close today?" Aperti means open right?
I learned French pretty well and I almost magically can understand a lot of this already. Amazing how related the languages are
I k n o w, also some words sound like spanish as well imo
L’italiano è molto più simile allo spagnolo che al francese🤷🏼♂️
La pronuncia italiana è simile alla spagnola ma il vocabulario è simile al francese
I speak Spanish and it helps me a lot now I'm learning Italian. I can understand the pronunciation and many words! Same with Portuguese which is my next target language
@@Itachi86Uchiha Personnally, I think that italian is closer to french than spanish. Of course it might look like spanish because ok the rolled r, but italian and french share way more cognates than italian and spanish do.
Italian short stories, good job!
É molto interessante! Grazie!
This is incredible. Real-life native-speaker dialogs at normal speed! I only wish there was a way to break these up, so I can listen to them over and over, without guessing where they start, because the video is so compressed. I've already learned a lot. Thanks!
Watteau are you interested in some lessons?
@@lucaarmatoi am
Veramente interessante ed esposto in maniera chiara, di aiuto, grazzie mille !
Grazie, per il video!!! Mi sembra molto interessante. Conversazioni di tutti i giorni, anche in diversi situazioni. Un saluto.
grazie molte è utile per me
This is extremely useful! grazie mille!
Es un EXCELENTE EJERCICIO!!Lo escucho varias veces por día 😄🇦🇷
It's just too funny seeing Italians writing down how much helpful this video is.
Ha,ha!!😂👌
Thank you very much for this video
1:51 he said only “Ok” subtitle was “Ok, thank you”
2:21 he said in italian “it was really a beautiful day” not it was not bad
3:40 he said in italian “which one do you think looks better” he didn’t say “shirt” at all.
My point is as new learner for new language we really need to know the exact translation and what did they say and what they didn’t, so we can do our analysis and understand it better, to not get confuse.
Thank you for the videos, it’s really helpful but it’s need to be reviewed again. Grazie 😊
Using literal language can mess up a little. they are writing what these words are translated into english, but yes their meaning and context in english
Ma rumpa mia i bal rimbambí e va a laurà
Complimenti per questo video è così spettacolo. Sono in Italia da due anni ora, io capisco tante cose quando qualcuno mi dice qualcosa in italiano. Ma è difficile per rispondere però non lo so come giunto le parole. Ho trovato questo video cinque giorni fa e adesso io miglio di primo. Grazie al voi!
are you in taly still
This is a great way to learn. Thanks!
wow that's actually pretty useful, i even understood a lot of it
Nice technic not only for listening but also vocabulary
La prattica è essenziale per imparare una lingua e queste conversazioni quotidiane sono eccellenti per pratticare l'italiano. Grazie mille. 👍
Pratica-praticare 😉
@@lucaarmato Il bello dello spagnolo (altra lingua che ho imparato negli anni) è che non raddoppia le consonanti come l'italiano, quindi a differenza dello spagnolo è difficile per gli stranieri saper scrivere correttamente l'italiano. Probabilmente ho sbagliato a scrivere 'raddoppiato', ma non preoccuparti, sono sicuro che c'è qualche persona appassionata là fuori che lo 'correggerà' o 'coregerrà' per me!
I just love this video...I listen to it when I wash the dishes...😀
1:42 is it correct that "Pronto" translates to "Hello"? I cross-referenced to other sources and they only translated the word to "quick, prompt, speedy". Would appreciate any help! :)
Ciaoooo ragazzi, grazie mille per la lezione spero di riuscirci a imparare. 🤗🤗🤗
My son wants to learn Italian and I'm wicked excited to learn as well
Grazie tante. Parlo portoghese e ho capito 99% della conversazione!
IL 99% della conversazione .... :)
Thanks I love tu this video
Such a beautiful language.. it is like a song :)
Very nice! This pattern is so educative.
france and italia's language are the 2 that will bless our ears
The Best!!!👍😊🥰 Many thanks!!
I love Italian language so much, thus hear I am trying to learn 🥺
Veramente buono. Grazie.
1:43 it's wrong. What time do you close today = A che ora chiudete oggi? Not "Quando siete aperti oggi?"
Mi è piaciuto molto questo video! Posso ascoltare mentre faccio un'altra cosa Me sembra davvero utile per sviluppare il nostro italiano Grazie mille! Saluto dal Brasile!
A good tip, if it feels too fast press the settings icon and set the speed to 0.5x
Okay so then a 2 hour listening exercise becomes a four hour one, how about just make the audio right the first time. If they didn't make crappy audio that's so unintelligible in the first place it would be quite easy to listen to normal speed italian. Whoever was speaking in these audio lessons should have been aware they were talking to begginer students of italian why would you speak so fast like your in a race and have to finish talking as soon as possible because you need to go to the toilet before you explode.
@@benjamin7627 For me it was perfect because I'm not interested in what they say but how an italian native speaker would say it. If they simply read it out, slowly and how it's written, you would not be able to train your listening skill.
piaccere di trovare questo sito. sara molto utile per imparare la lingua.mille grazie)
This is wonderful practice!!!
Siete bravissimi, grazie mille per i video
It helps to listen at .75 speed. This is great!
That's what I'm doing as well!
Sir your teaching method is best. I search teacher of this tipe. Like like like......................
@ 1.44 the Italian text asks 'When are you open today?' The English subtitle reads 'What time do you close today', which would be Che tempo siete chiuso oggi?
Vero.
In this case “When are you open today?’” It means “ Quando”. “What time do you open today?” It means “ a que horas”.
Thank you for helping me
amazing those lessons. thanks a lot. grazie mile
Un bel video 👌grazie mille
Boa aula parabéns
this is so helpful thanks so much
I understand some of it bc i speak spanish its really similar to spanish language and that made it easier to understand
Io ho cominciato a studiare l’italiano nel liceo e ho potuto imparare molto veloce perché parlava spagnolo a casa. La grammatica e le coniugazioni sono un po’ diversi ma molte parole sono simili.
Molto utile. Grazie!
at 1:44 The question is "When do you open? " you have...What time do you close???
Esatto. Wrong translation which still works the same to be honest.
it gets easier than other ones that I saw but nothing compares to real conversations :( anways slowly learning!!
molto ...bene ..greetings to my mexico argentina italy
At 3:13 the girl doesn't pronounce the word 'due' properly ('Alle due in punto'). It could be a dialect thing or something. But that aside, thanks a million for everything you are doing for us!!! 💖
grande video.. Molto utili Ed preciso
its helped me a lot, thanks
The best audio visual this is the best👌🏻
thanks for that great lesson. Now; I can say I know how to greet someone in Italian
grazie👍 ottimo leggere
really niche stuff. best way of learning
love it!!
Thank you so much 👌💞💞💞🦋
So helpful !!!!
Questo video mi piace assai!!
Grazie mille questa video molta bene
thnx pod 101 [ notice use of subjunctive usually after che ]
very good video, thank you.
Thank you so much
Very nice video Grazie 😘
Grazie! Grazie a questo video posso Imparare piú parole!
Mi piace moltissimo, questo lezione!👌
Grazie mille!😊👍
questA lezione :)
grazie mille❤
I'm not italian but I'm fluent because I'm in Italy almost 3 years,so I can easily help if someone interested.
I would welcome your assistance
@@kwabenaopokuanaman908 what do you need help in?
giorgio nagy: Wish to learn italiano language intensively. Can you provide me with useful links and wesites for this study?
I'd be interested in your help in formulating sentences.
Meeee,, pleaseee
I love Italy 🇱🇾🇱🇾❤❤❤ Libya
Woou your Chanel is fantastic congratulations!!!!
Ho imparato molto cose da questa video, tutti conversazioni in questa video sono utile e utilizzabile . le parole e le frasi sono stati usati in modi grammaticale per tutti i livelli. è utile più per il livello A2 e B1. Grazie mille per la vostra Video informativo.
18:24 what would be an italian word for "meeting"?
Incontro - riunione
@@nadiarossetti9004 grazie!
I have been trying for 15 months now to learn some Italian, giving it, I would say, on average, close to an hour, 6 days a week, using online tools, videos and also studying grammar, like conjugation and similar things, on my own. I am a little old for this now (61), so I understood going in that my learning would be limited. Still, I was disciplined. I can now read a little simple Italian, but I still need to regularly resort to a dictionary unless I read something short over and over. And listening? Hah. I tested myself with this video, which certainly uses simple sentences, and I can comprehend almost nothing, literally nothing that is said by the fluent speakers, just as if I never studied, unless I read along at the same time. Speaking and writing something myself? I am painstakingly slow. I must think out each word and can't seem to write even one sentence without a mistake. Word order and using prepositions correctly are beyond me. This is a little disappointing in one sense, but, not surprising. I realize that if I had not taken French in high school (not that I was a good student), it would be much worse, probably impossible to have gotten even as far as I have. I have tried, as suggested, to just let it flow without stopping to look up words or to read, but when I do that, it seems a complete waste of time as I understand virtually nothing, just a stray word here or there.
I am not trying to dissuade anyone from trying. I still enjoy it and just being able to read a little has its value. I have come to the conclusion that for me, immersion would possibly be the only way I could become even remotely fluent, and that is definitely not happening. I suspect it is true for most everyone over, say, 30-40, getting progressively harder as age increases. Best to learn when you are young. There are always exceptions, of course.
David, I don't know if you will see this as you wrote over a year ago - but my experience is almost identical. I'm actually 73, and have been having weekly lessons for two years. I have good French and some facility with language generally. But my Italian is not really improving. I can understand most written material, but spoken, niente! Well, a few words here and there. I'm sure it is only a question of familiarity with the way words are run together in speech and am trying to psych myself up to go and do a week or two's immersive course in lovely Bologna, but am a bit nervous. As you say, it's great even to understand the language in written form, but I'd still like to have a simple conversation!
@@janchamier3368 Good for you, Jan. I'm a year further along in my own practice then from when I wrote that, but the same limitations are there in terms of processing and speed. For myself, even writing is so slow and I still always make so many mistakes, that I can't even imagine a conversation. I'm just happy that when I read a novel and someone says something in Italian or French, I can usually read it. But, I would love to hear from you how your immersion experience goes. In bocca a lupo.
@@aslkhjbasijt785 Grazie, David. Incrociamo le dita! 🤞😊
Hi David! U left this message a year ago and I don’t know if u are still studying Italian these days. In case u do, there is a podcast called “coffee break Italian”. U can listen to it on your phone or computer, etc. the lessons started very basic and the host repeats and explains every thing in detail. Then the lessons gradually progress. I think this podcast is a great start for beginner listeners with some Italian language knowledge. It definitely helped me!
@@daffidalswuli Thanks. I am, though less diligently. I will take your advice and try it.
Grazie a voi
As a Spanish speaker I can some what keep up with their conversation. But I found it hard when they speak fast. Written Italian is difficult for me since I can’t read Spanish well
This is great 😁😁😁 Thank you ☺️