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A2 Italian GrammarCoordinating Conjunctions

Connect sentences and ideas in Italian using coordinating conjunctions (congiunzioni coordinanti). Master e, ma, o, però, quindi, and other essential linking words for fluid communication.

1Basic Conjunctions: E, O, Ma

The most common Italian conjunctions are e (and), o (or), and ma (but). They connect words, phrases, or sentences of equal importance. Note that e becomes ed before words starting with 'e' for smoother pronunciation.

Basic Conjunctions

ItalianEnglishFunction
e / edandaddition
o / oppureoralternative
mabutcontrast
né...néneither...nornegative addition

Examples

Ho comprato pane e latte.

I bought bread and milk.

e connects two nouns

Vuoi caffè o tè?

Do you want coffee or tea?

o offers alternatives

È stanco ma felice.

He is tired but happy.

ma shows contrast

Non ho né tempo né soldi.

I have neither time nor money.

né...né for double negative

2Contrast: Però, Tuttavia, Invece

Italian has several ways to express contrast beyond ma. Però means 'however/but' and often comes later in the sentence. Tuttavia is more formal, while invece means 'instead/on the other hand'.

Contrast Conjunctions

ItalianEnglishUsage
peròhowever, butcommon, informal
tuttaviahowever, neverthelessformal
inveceinstead, on the other handcontrast
eppureyet, and yetsurprising contrast

Examples

Piove, però esco lo stesso.

It's raining, but I'm going out anyway.

però after the comma

Era difficile; tuttavia ho finito.

It was difficult; nevertheless I finished.

tuttavia - formal writing

Io vado, tu invece resti.

I'm going, you instead are staying.

invece for contrast

Ha studiato poco, eppure ha passato l'esame.

He studied little, yet he passed the exam.

eppure - unexpected result

3Cause and Result: Quindi, Perciò, Allora

To express cause and effect or logical consequence, Italian uses quindi (therefore), perciò (therefore/so), and allora (so/then). These help build logical arguments and explain reasoning.

Result Conjunctions

ItalianEnglishUsage
quinditherefore, sological conclusion
perciòtherefore, soconsequence
alloraso, thencasual, common
dunquetherefore, somore formal

Examples

Sono stanco, quindi vado a letto.

I'm tired, so I'm going to bed.

quindi shows consequence

Ha piovuto, perciò le strade sono bagnate.

It rained, so the streets are wet.

perciò explains result

Non hai studiato, allora non esci.

You didn't study, so you're not going out.

allora - consequence (casual)

Dunque, cosa facciamo?

So then, what do we do?

dunque - conclusion/summary

4Addition and Emphasis: Anche, Inoltre, Anzi

To add information or emphasize points, use anche (also), inoltre (furthermore), pure (also/too), and anzi (on the contrary/in fact). Anzi is particularly useful for correcting or strengthening statements.

Addition Conjunctions

ItalianEnglishUsage
anchealso, tooaddition
inoltrefurthermore, moreoverformal addition
purealso, tooemphasis
anzion the contrary, in factcorrection/emphasis

Examples

Parlo italiano e anche spagnolo.

I speak Italian and also Spanish.

anche adds information

È intelligente; inoltre, è simpatica.

She is intelligent; furthermore, she is nice.

inoltre - formal addition

Non è difficile, anzi è facile.

It's not difficult; on the contrary, it's easy.

anzi corrects/contrasts

Vengo anch'io, e pure Marco.

I'm coming too, and Marco as well.

pure emphasizes inclusion