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Italian Road Map for Upper Intermediate/Advanced Level Students (B2-C1)

April 23, 2014 By Cher 2 Comments

YAY! You’ve been noted as an advanced student. When I have resources or free lessons that are a good fit for your level, I’ll send them your way. Until then, check out this list below of articles.

Buono studio!!

Italian Road Map for Upper Intermediate%2FAdvanced Level Students (B2-C1)

Grammar

— The Present Subjunctive Tense in Italian (or the tense that even Italians are confused about)

— Italian Imperfect Subjunctive Tense (or how to let go of reality and dream big in Italian)

— The Passato Remoto Tense in Italian (or how to relax in the midst of grammatical chaos)

— The Trapassato Remoto Tense in Italian

— 9 Reasons You’re Making Mistakes With Prepositions in Italian and How to Avoid Them (Hint: Most mistakes come from #2)

— 8 Reasons Your Italian Doesn’t Sound Italian (And 8 Fixes to Get to a Near Native Level)

— How to Use the Trapassato Prossimo in Italian (or How to Talk About Things that Happened in the Past)

— 12 More Phrases that Stalk the Subjunctive Mood

— The Past Conditional Tense (or How to Say “Would Have, Could Have, Should Have”)

— How to Use the Tricky Verb “Mettersi” in Italian

— What are Pronominal Verbs and How Do You Use Them in Italian?

Vocabulary

— 3 Main Ways to Use the Word Proprio in Italian

— Italian Word Speed Dates: Anzi, Dunque e Piuttosto

— Italian Word Speed Dates: Tale, Eccome, e Semmai

— Italian Word Speed Dates: Appena, Addirittura, Comunque and Quindi

— The Colors in Italian (or how to talk about her bright red lips + his skintight white t-shirt)

— Italian Word Speed Dates: Perfino, Persino and Ciononostante

— 14 Classy Italian Phrases to Say in the Bedroom

— 7 Phrases to [Politely + Firmly] Turn Down a Date in Italian

— How to Argue Like an Italian (and Which Topics to Avoid)

— How to Date an Italian Man or Woman

— Christmas: A Thing of Beauty

— Italian Word Speed Dates: Finché & Affinché

— How to Get a Haircut in Italy

— 5 Italian Proverbs to Spice up Your Vocabulary

— 9 Phrases for Talking About Your Business in Italian

Inspiration + Usage

— 29 Ways to Practice Your Italian While You’re in Italy

— How to Learn to Speak Italian Without Ever Being in Italy (or why you should hug people with big ideas for language learning)

— How to Find a Language Partner to Practice Italian With on Italki

— How to Hire an Informal Tutor to Practice Italian on Italki

— How to Hire a Professional Teacher to Learn Italian on Italki

— How to Improve Your Writing in Italian by Getting Corrections from Native Speakers Using Italki

— How to Improve Your Italian Grammar and Conversational Skills by Asking Questions on Italki

— What it Means to Be an Italian Mamma and Build a Career in Italy with Trisha Thomas

— 10 Books I Love in Italian

— 7 Things Keeping You From Fluency in Italian

Dialect

— Quick + Dirty Cheat Sheet to Calabrese

— Quick + Dirty Cheat Sheet to Romanesco

— 12 Words That Will Help You Talk Like a Tuscan

Looking for other road maps?

Italian Mini Road Map for the Absolute Beginner (A1)

Italian Road Map for the Beginner Level Student (A2)

Italian Road Map for the Intermediate Learner (B1)

 

Filed Under: Advanced Italian, Intermediate Italian, Italian

About Cher

Cher is the founder of The Iceberg Project and a passionate learner of the Italian, Mandarin and Spanish languages. In a little town called Vegas, you can find her searching the Internet for Doctor Who and Parks & Rec memes, drinking bubble tea, or talking about how much she loves grammar.

« Explore Authentic Italian Cooking with Simonetta and Paola of Toscana Mia
How to Find and Explore Your Italian Ancestry with Mary Tedesco »

Comments

  1. Susan Sands says

    May 25, 2014 at 5:53 pm

    Hi Cher, (Sorry, English) I thought that di + infinitive be used (just kidding!) with the same subject in italian eg instead of Penso che io debba comprare qua (in your example) wouldn’t it be penso di dovere comprare… Love your site. Grazie. Ciao Susan

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Must-Read Articles for Absolute Beginners in Italian says:
    January 27, 2017 at 6:18 pm

    […] Italian Mini Road Map for the Upper Intermediate/Advanced Level Student (B2-C1) […]

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