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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: 6 of 14 
─ Videos: 81-95 of 199 Totaling 12 hours 7 minutes

Corso di italiano con Daniela - Il condizionale - Part 3

Difficulty: difficulty - Beginner Beginner

Italy

Daniela discusses the irregular conjugation of the conditional tense for these verbs: dovere, potere, sapere, vedere, and avere.

Corso di italiano con Daniela - Il condizionale - Part 4

Difficulty: difficulty - Beginner Beginner

Italy

Daniela's fourth segment on the present conditional tense covers the important, and irregular, verbs: dovere, potere, sapere, vedere, & avere.

Corso di italiano con Daniela - Il condizionale - Part 5

Difficulty: difficulty - Beginner Beginner

Italy

Daniela continues with conditional verbs. This time she focuses on the key verbs: essere [to be], avere [to have], stare [to stay], rimanere [to remain], and dare [to give].

Corso di italiano con Daniela - Il condizionale - Part 6

Difficulty: difficulty - Beginner Beginner

Italy

In today's lesson on the conditional tense, Daniela covers the verbs: tenere [to keep], venire [to come], and sentire [to feel], among others. Modal verbs, as in volere [to want, would like] in the conditional are also discussed.

Corso di italiano con Daniela - Il condizionale - Part 7

Difficulty: difficulty - Beginner Beginner

Italy

Daniela continues with the conditional, showing how it's used to express a desire, provide advice, or express possibility.

Corso di italiano con Daniela - Approfondimento Verbi Modali - Part 1

Difficulty: difficulty - Beginner Beginner

Italy

Daniela recaps the modal verbs: potere [can], volere [want], and dovere [must], which are placed immediately before infinitive verbs. Modal verbs are also known as auxiliary verbs or helping verbs.

Corso di italiano con Daniela - Approfondimento Verbi Modali - Part 2

Difficulty: difficulty - Beginner Beginner

Italy

Daniela covers three modal or auxiliary verbs that are followed by nouns and not by the usual infinitive verbs. The verbs are: voglio [want], potere [can], and dovere [must].

Corso di italiano con Daniela - Il congiuntivo - Part 1

Difficulty: difficulty - Beginner Beginner

Italy

Daniela focuses on the present subjunctive and provides tips on how to recognize the subjunctive tense.

Corso di italiano con Daniela - Il congiuntivo - Part 2

Difficulty: difficulty - Beginner Beginner

Italy

Daniela continues her lesson on the present subjunctive, using the verbs parlare [to speak], vedere [to see], and partire [to leave].

Corso di italiano con Daniela - Il congiuntivo - Part 3

Difficulty: difficulty - Beginner Beginner

Italy

Daniela homes in on the present subjunctive of the auxiliary verb essere [to be].

Corso di italiano con Daniela - Il congiuntivo - Part 4

Difficulty: difficulty - Beginner Beginner

Italy

Daniela covers the present subjunctive for the following verbs: avere [to have], andare [to go], fare [to do], and bere [to drink],

Corso di italiano con Daniela - Il congiuntivo - Part 5

Difficulty: difficulty - Beginner Beginner

Italy

Daniela covers the present subjunctive of these three verbs: rimanere [to remain, to stay], venire [to come], and dire [to say].

Corso di italiano con Daniela - Il congiuntivo - Part 6

Difficulty: difficulty - Beginner Beginner

Italy

Daniela provides a list of verbs that always come before the subjunctive mood verbs. We'll see, however, that English doesn't follow the same rules.

Corso di italiano con Daniela - Il congiuntivo - Part 7

Difficulty: difficulty - Beginner Beginner

Italy

Daniela provides a nice long list of the so-called perception verbs and expressions that always precede the present subjunctive.

Corso di italiano con Daniela - Il congiuntivo - Part 8

Difficulty: difficulty - Beginner Beginner

Italy

Daniela highlights two verbs that do not call for the present subjunctive—the verbs vedere [to see] and sentire [to sense, to hear, to feel].

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