X
Yabla Italian
italian.yabla.com
Add to Homescreen
 Library
Corso di italiano con Daniela
Beginner
199 Videos

Daniela teaches Italian in a classroom, complete with blackboard, chalk, eraser, and students. Her lessons are very popular and people love her spontaneity and teaching style. She addresses grammatical topics one by one, geared to both beginning and intermediate level students.

75 Episodes
Videos
Pages: 13 of 14 
─ Videos: 186-199 of 199 Totaling 12 hours 7 minutes

Corso di italiano con Daniela - La forma passiva - Part 3

Difficulty: difficulty - Beginner Beginner

Italy

Although the si passivante (passivizing si) is a kind of si impersonale, it has some very specific differences. Daniela explains them and provides some examples.

Corso di italiano con Daniela - 2) Proposizioni subordinate causali - Part 1

Difficulty: difficulty - Intermediate Intermediate

Italy

In a sentence, the main clause can stand on its own, but there can also be a subordinate or dependent clause. Today's lesson addresses the causal subordinate clause, which gives the reason for the action in the main clause. Conjunctions such as perché (because) dato che (given that) are used to join the two clauses.

Corso di italiano con Daniela - 2) Proposizioni subordinate causali - Part 2

Difficulty: difficulty - Beginner Beginner

Italy

Daniela talks about explicit and implicit causal subordinate clauses.

Corso di italiano con Daniela - 1) Proposizioni subordinate temporali

Difficulty: difficulty - Beginner Beginner

Italy

Another kind of subordinate clause is the temporal subordinate. One way we introduce it is with conjunctions having to do with time, such as "while," "when," and "as long as." There are other ways to form a temporal subordinate clause, and Daniela explains them.

Corso di italiano con Daniela - 3) Proposizioni subordinate finali - Part 1

Difficulty: difficulty - Beginner Beginner

Italy

There is a certain kind of subordinate clause, called a "clause of purpose," that basically answers the question, "to what end?" Italian has a number of conjunctions that can be translated as "so that," and they take the subjunctive in most cases. So this kind of subordinate clause can be tricky.

Corso di italiano con Daniela - 3) Proposizioni subordinate finali - Part 2

Difficulty: difficulty - Intermediate Intermediate

Italy

Don't be scared off by fancy names of clauses and parts of speech. Daniela is just showing us different ways of saying the same thing, but sometimes one way is clearer than the other, especially when the subject changes from main to subordinate clause.

Corso di italiano con Daniela - 4) Proposizioni subordinate concessive - Part 1

Difficulty: difficulty - Intermediate Intermediate

Italy

Italian has an amazingly long list of conjunctions or locutions that mean "although," "despite," and similar words. Daniela explains what a concession subordinate clause is and gives us several examples.

Corso di italiano con Daniela - 4) Proposizioni subordinate concessive - Part 2

Difficulty: difficulty - Intermediate Intermediate

Italy

Daniela explains further about constructing explicit subordinate clauses and gives some examples to clarify.

Corso di italiano con Daniela - 4) Proposizioni subordinate concessive - Part 3

Difficulty: difficulty - Intermediate Intermediate

Italy

To conclude the lesson on concessive subordinate clauses, we look at those constructed using the past participle of a verb or the gerund and introductory locations such as benché (though) and pure (despite), among others.

Corso di italiano con Daniela - 6) Proposizioni subordinate relative - Part 1

Difficulty: difficulty - Intermediate Intermediate

Italy

Daniela talks about two kinds of relative subordinate clauses — restrictive and explanatory — and how we punctuate them differently.

Corso di italiano con Daniela - 6) Proposizioni subordinate relative - Part 2

Difficulty: difficulty - Intermediate Intermediate

Italy

Daniela explains the relative pronouns used in forming a relative subordinate clause. She starts out with the explicit kind.

Corso di italiano con Daniela - 6) Proposizioni subordinate relative - Part 3

Difficulty: difficulty - Intermediate Intermediate

Italy

In this lesson, we look at implicit relative subordinate clauses, and how they are introduced. One of their main characteristics is that they use the infinitive of a verb, rather than a conjugated one.

Corso di italiano con Daniela - 5) Proposizioni subordinate comparative - Part 1

Difficulty: difficulty - Beginner Beginner

Italy

Daniela tells us about comparatives used in subordinate clauses. There are three kinds: majority, minority, and equality.

Corso di italiano con Daniela - 5) Proposizioni subordinate comparative - Part 2

Difficulty: difficulty - Beginner Beginner

Italy

In this part of the lesson about subordinate clauses, Daniela talks about analogies or hypothetical situations. The English equivalent would be when we say, "as if..."

12...11121314
Go To Page

Are you sure you want to delete this comment? You will not be able to recover it.