Answers
Mar 22, 2016 - 04:12 PM
Mar 22, 2016 - 05:17 PM
Interesting, Dennis. This looks quite comprehensive. I'm curious: it gives "egli" for the first person singular and "essi" for the third person plural, where we have been taught "lui/lei/Lei" and "loro" respectively. Can anyone explain?
Mar 23, 2016 - 06:59 AM
http://en.bab.la/conjugation/italian/...
Type in the Italian verb. You get all 15 verb tenses.
Works for other languages too.
Egli and Essi are old forms of pronouns, such as his and hers. They've fallen out of use but I have seen them in older Italian literature.
Type in the Italian verb. You get all 15 verb tenses.
Works for other languages too.
Egli and Essi are old forms of pronouns, such as his and hers. They've fallen out of use but I have seen them in older Italian literature.
Mar 23, 2016 - 12:03 PM
Is there a way on this site to input the English word and get the Italian?
Mar 23, 2016 - 09:20 PM
Barron's 501 Italian Verbs is a good actual book I use. It gives 14 tenses plus imperative for each verb. It doesn't have every possible verb, but covers all the common ones.
Mar 24, 2016 - 02:03 PM
Thanks! I'll try the Barron's as well as the online resource. 501 verbs sounds like plenty to me!
Apr 25, 2016 - 04:36 AM
I also just bought the Barron's 501 book and am finding it very helpful for quick references! Good luck
Jul 09, 2016 - 05:52 PM
http://www.italian-verbs.com I have used this one repeatedly.
Aug 02, 2016 - 02:09 PM
You could try Barron's Practice For Success Italian Verb Tenses by Marcel Danesi, Ph.D.