If you'd like to take advantage of bonus materials, lesson notes and a translation challenge, you can access the full Coffee Break Italian Season 3 course on the Coffee Break Academy. Listen out for useful words and phrases including: rompere il ghiaccio, diversi/e and qualsiasi before we round off the episode with an interesting phrase used to refer to a tour guide in Italian. We then hear a dialogue in which Nicola, a local tour guide, is meeting tourists who have signed up for his guided tour in Puglia. Throughout the lesson, Mark and Francesca focus on the most widely used indefinite adjectives and pronouns in Italian. If you don’t receive an email within the next few minutes, please check your junk mail / promotions tab in case our email doesn’t come straight to your inbox.Welcome back to another episode of Coffee Break Italian Season 3! The topic of this episode is indefinite adjectives and pronouns - words used to express indefinite quantities without any specific reference to quantities, people, things, or places. Non c’è problema! Simply enter your email and your name in the box below and we’ll be in touch. To access the premium version of the Coffee Break Italian Reading Club, click the image below. It’s best, therefore, to make up your mind now whether you want to go free or premium. Please note that if you go for the free option and at a later date decide to purchase the premium version, you will need to start the series again with text 1. ![]() Get the podcast Access this lesson and all future lessons of Coffee Break Italian automatically by subscribing to the podcast. You’ll still receive the text by email, but we’ll also give you access to the Reading Club course in the Coffee Break Academy where you can access the text, vocabulary, a comprehension exercise, and an audio version of the text with both slow and normal speed readings of the text by a native speaker. In this episode of the Coffee Break Italian Magazine Francesca tells us more about Matera, and there’s a question from a listener about the difference between po‘, poco and pi.
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