Practice Italian with quick, focused quizzes that cover essential vocabulary, grammar, and everyday phrases. Each quiz helps you spot patterns, build accuracy, and get comfortable reading common Italian structures.
Master the Italian definite articles il, lo, and la with real-world noun examples and tricky edge cases. You’ll decide which article fits based on sound and spelling patterns, then reinforce the rule with quick repetition. Mixed difficulty keeps beginners comfortable while still challenging advanced learners.

Master the tricky Italian particles ci, ne, and si with targeted practice and real sentence contexts. You’ll learn when they replace places, quantities, or “people in general,” and how they behave in pronominal verbs and passive/reflexive forms. Great for clearing up the most common mix-ups in everyday Italian.
Master Italian passato prossimo with essere by choosing the right auxiliary and matching past participles correctly. This mixed-difficulty quiz targets the trickiest verbs (movement, change of state, reflexives) and agreement rules. Pick your preferred question count and difficulty, then practice with 4 options per question and no timer.
There are 3 quizzes with 331 questions total.
No. Each quiz has no timer, so you can answer at your own pace.
Every question is multiple-choice with 4 answer options.
You’ll practice vocabulary, basic grammar, and common everyday phrases used in simple Italian sentences.
Yes. The 3 quizzes include a mix of lengths and difficulty so you can choose easier review or more challenging practice.
These Italian quizzes help you strengthen core skills like vocabulary recognition, basic grammar, and reading comprehension in short, repeatable sessions.
You’ll also practice common everyday language—greetings, numbers, dates, and practical phrases—so you can understand and produce Italian more confidently.
Each question is multiple-choice with 4 options, and there’s no timer, so you can focus on accuracy and learning rather than speed.
Quiz difficulty and length vary across the set, letting you mix quick refreshers with longer practice runs depending on your level and goals.
Italian is a Romance language closely related to Spanish, French, and Portuguese, which means you’ll often see familiar Latin-based word roots and shared grammar patterns.
Modern standard Italian is based largely on Tuscan (especially Florentine) usage, influenced by writers like Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio.
If you miss a question, reread the prompt and compare the 4 options to spot the grammar or vocabulary clue that changes the meaning.
Try repeating quizzes after a break; spaced repetition helps you retain new words and patterns more reliably.