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Learn Italian at OnlineItalianClub.com - free Italian exercises each week, plus easy Italian readers & online Italian lessons.

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2026 January Sale Starting Soon – Time to Unsubscribe?

December 17, 2025 By Daniel Leave a Comment

Buondì.

From Saturday 27th December 2025 to Tuesday 6th January 2026, NativeSpeakerTeachers.com, which offers one-to-one online Italian, French, Spanish and German lessons, will be having its 2026 January Sale.

I’ll be emailing multiple times during that period to publicise their coupon code, which – if you apply it in your NativeSpeakerTeachers.com shopping cart – will save you 20% on your order total.

Practice with native speakers is an essential part of learning a language. So if you’re not already doing regular, one-to-one Italian/French/Spanish/German lessons (which can be conversation, grammar, whatever you want), why not take this opportunity to give it a try? And save a fifth on the regular price!

NativeSpeakerTeachers.com does promotions like this four times a year, in the spring, during the first week of July, in September, and at New Year. The discount is always 20%, which means anyone who plans when to purchase the lesson credits they need to continue taking regular online lessons throughout the year, will never pay the full price!

But what about those club members who are only here for the free stuff (which is fine), or who are no longer interested?

Two options:

1.) Any ‘bulk’ email, so like this one, will have an ‘unsubscribe’ link at the bottom. Clicking it will permanently remove your email address from the club mailing list. No longer interested? Prefer not to hear about next week’s promotion? Go ahead and use the ‘unsubscribe’ link (scroll right down to the end of this to find it.)

Really! You’ll be doing us a favour, as well as reducing the number of unwanted emails in the world. Having a large list costs us a monthly fee, which is money that’s wasted if we’re not a good match!

2.) Less drastically, just stop reading emails from the club until the sale ends, after which things will go back to normal, with just one regular email a week, on Wednesdays.

A presto!

And even sooner – our Italian school’s 2026 discount promotion

Separately from the club, my wife and I also run an Italian school, in Bologna, the one in Italy. I mention it in passing sometimes but don’t often promote it directly.

However, the school does one noteworthy promotion each year, in the week leading up to Christmas, when a 20% discount on GROUP Italian courses is on offer.

That promotion begins tomorrow, December 18th. Anyone on the school’s mailing list will get details. Join the mailing list by completing the form on the school website’s home page (and making sure you click the link in the ‘please confirm’ email) here: https://madrelinguaitalian.com/

More information about the 2026 promotion can be found here: Madrelingua’s 2026 Italian Course Offer is coming soon!

One Final Festive Easy Italian Reader Ebook – an easier one!

The last couple of weeks, EasyReaders.org has been promoting a selection of seasonal Italian ‘easy reader’ ebooks, first ‘Natale a sorpresa‘ (about Christmas), then ‘Giallo a Capodanno‘ (New Year). They’re both still half-price, if you missed them.

But attenzione! ‘Natale a sorpresa‘ and ‘Giallo a Capodanno‘ are both for upper-intermediate or advanced students, so might be too much of a challenge for many of you.

To remedy that, this week’s (final) seasonal ‘easy reader’ ebook choice is the A2/B1 (pre-intermediate/intermediate) -level ‘Il calendario di Laura‘.

Easy Italian readers - Il calendario di Laura - cover image

Laura finds weekdays a bore but loves public holidays! And Italy has plenty to enjoy, each with its own traditions.

Read how she and her husband like to spend each ‘giorno festivo’, from Epiphany on January 6th, through the spring, summer, fall and winter months, to the climax of the Christmas holidays, New Year, and then, to begin all over again!

  • .pdf e-book (+ audio available free online)
  • .mobi (Kindle-compatible) and .epub (other ebook readers) available on request at no extra charge – just add a note to the order form or email us
  • 14 chapters to read and listen to
  • 14 exercises to check your understanding
  • Italian/English glossaries of ‘difficult’ terms for the level
  • Suitable for students at elementary level and above
  • Download your Free Sample Chapter (.pdf)

Remember, this week ‘Il calendario di Laura‘ is 50% discounted, so just £4.99 rather than the usual ‘easy reader’ ebook price of £9.99!

Buy ‘Il calendario di Laura‘ just £4.99! | Free Sample Chapter (.pdf) | Catalog

Find more ebooks, organised by level, then type: A1 | A1/A2 | A2 | A2/B1 | B1 | B1/B2 | B2 | B2/C1 | C1 | C1/C2 | C2

How do I access my ebook?

When your order is ‘completed’ (normally immediately after your payment), a download link will be automatically emailed to you. It’s valid for 7 days and 3 download attempts so please save a copy of the .pdf ebook in a safe place. Other versions of the ebook, where available, cannot be downloaded but will be emailed to people who request them. There’s a space to do that on the order form – where it says Additional information, Order notes (optional). If you forget, or if you have problems downloading the .pdf, don’t worry! Email us at the address on the website and we’ll help. Also, why not check out our FAQ?

P.S.

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Enough of promotions: don’t forget to read/listen to Tuesday’s FREE bulletin of ‘easy’ Italian news from EasyItalianNews.com.

These ‘easy news’ bulletins, which are published on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, each contain simplified articles with an online audio recording. They’re free to access on the website, with no registration required.

Subscribe (also free) and they’ll email you each bulletin as soon as it is published, which is a helpful thrice-weekly reminder to work on your Italian reading and listening skills!

No time or energy for learning foreign languages

December 10, 2025 By Daniel 2 Comments

No time to read this? Why not find something to study instead? A1 – Beginner/Elementary | A2 – Pre-Intermediate | B1 – Intermediate | B2 – Upper-Intermediate | C1 – Advanced | C2 – Proficiency | What’s my level? | Italian level test

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Buondì.

I’ve no time or energy for learning foreign languages. It’s a situation which has dragged on way too long, and about which I suffer from regular pangs of guilt.

“The road to hell is paved with good intentions” my mother used to tell me, and perhaps she was right. I wanted to do this, I’d planned to do that, and I’d definitely get around to that other thing as soon as…

And then, more than two years ago, we volunteered to mind a cute, seven-day-old pup who, for the purposes of these articles, I call Bug. Because he was like one when he arrived – a little bug, so inconsequential in terms of the space he took up in the world that we could have easily forgotten he was there – except for screaming, and the three-hourly bottle feeds day and night for the first six months.

Twenty six months later, tiny pup Bug now better resembles one of those pit bulls you see burly humans struggling to control in public parks, though he’s rather more good-natured.

Suffice it to say our ‘temporary’ charge takes up a lot more of our energy and time than we expected, not least because his petting zoo / daycare facility is right on the other side of the city, and with Bologna’s ongoing tram works, traffic is even more slow-moving and stressful.

Hence no time or energy for learning foreign languages. E da un bel po’.

So I was pondering this as I drove back from dropping Bug off at the petting zoo this morning (a six or seven mile return trip that took more than half an hour), while listening to the news in Swedish.

If you listen to news broadcasts in a foreign language, you’ll be familiar with the sensation of your understanding sort of drifting in and out. Sometimes you can follow without even noticing, other times it’s all just noise, and then there’s the rest of the spectrum in between, when comprehension is partial, when you can get what’s being said to a greater or lesser degree, often times depending on how familiar the topic is.

You’ll probably also recognise the experience of getting caught up with an unknown word or expression, something so central to what’s being said that, in the background, your brain starts to guess at what it could be.

If subconscious brain comes up with an acceptable hypothesis, then all well and good – that’s how language learning is supposed to happen. But if not, if the grey matter has simply no clue this time, then the word gets flagged up for conscious brain to deal with.

Which is irritating, as besides disrupting the news broadcast, the unknown word reminds me of all those good intentions abandoned by the wayside.

Ma poi I had a cheering thought (I guess I must have slept better than usual), which was that I never understand everything I hear, that that’s totally normal, and that I should totally abandon the negative self-talk and instead give myself a pat on the back simply for being in the habit of listening to foreign language news broadcasts in the car at all. Anyone could, most people don’t.

Decades back, I made the decision to stop listening to English language radio and to ONLY listen to radio broadcasts in the languages I was learning. It seemed like a good idea at the time and, more or less, the resolution stuck.

I still watch English-language TV (all too easy now, with streaming) as my Italian wife prefers it. But when I’m on my own it’ll be Italian, Swedish, French or occasionally Turkish or Spanish.

I tried the same thing with reading, though with less success. I have newspaper apps on my phone for all those languages, but mostly read in Italian or English. Still, I don’t have the BBC or British newspaper apps installed (deliberately), so the go-to for finding out what craziness Trump is up to now is RaiNews.it.

And in moments of leisure (when Bug’s watching TV – he’s fine with Italian or English, either way) this year I’ve been working my way through a twenty-book series of historical novels, mostly in Italian as those are easier to obtain.

What about actual speaking?

Normally on Wednesday’s I have a half-hour conversation with a Swedish pensioner, online obviously, though not today as he has a hospital appointment.

Bug and I speak Italian, though we sing songs in English (The Wheels On The Bus, Old MacDonald, Twinkle Twinkle Little Star, and now Christmas carols). With the rest of the family, so Stefi (the face of our Italian school) and Tom (voice of EasyItalianNews.com), it’s English.

Naturally I chat in Italian with Bug’s keepers when I pick him up of an evening. They like to obsess over his bowel movements, so I’ve picked up lots of words meaning ‘soft and runny’. And with other pet owners, and their charges, in the park.

OK, I’ve rambled a little, but the point is this: there’s no point in fretting if I don’t have the time or energy I’d like to have for learning foreign languages AS LONG AS I have at least a few good habits to keep my subsconscious busy.

IF there’s some regular foreign-language input, then the learning will happen anyway. Perhaps not as rapidly or in such an organised, predictable way as when I have time to plan my learning, but not nothing.

Good habits are the key, see?

And especially EASY good habits, things which don’t cost money, time or emotional effort. If whatever you do when you’re driving or doing chores isn’t critical to your wealth and happiness, then why not work at replacing it with a similar activity in Italian, and/or other languages that interest you? These days, with smartphones and so on, that’s easy and free to do.

Then scroll forward a few years: you’ll be amazed at the difference your new habit has made!

Alla prossima settimana.

Half-Price Ebook Easy Reader ‘Giallo a Capodanno’ Just £4.99

Easy Italian reader - Natale a sorpresa - cover image

Last week’s email about the half-price promotion on the B2-level Italian easy reader eBook ‘Natale a sorpresa‘ could easily have ended up in people’s ‘trash’ folder, along with all the ‘Black Friday’ offers.

So – and because that story is about Christmas – the EasyReaders.org team are leaving it at half-price until the holidays are over, to give you a chance to grab your copy at a discount: ‘Natale a sorpresa‘.

And this week? They have another seasonal Italian eBook for you!

Half-price, B2/C1-level easy reader ebook ‘Giallo a Capodanno‘ is perfect for improving your Italian reading/listening skills over the holidays, though it’s a little harder than ‘Natale a sorpresa‘ so check the free sample chapters for each before you buy:

  • https://easyreaders.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Natale-a-sorpresa-SAMPLE.pdf
  • https://easyreaders.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/Giallo-a-Capodanno-SAMPLE.pdf

Read/listen to one or both of these over the next week or two and you’ll improve your Italian comprehension skills, consolidate the grammar and vocabulary you’ve studied, and get into the festive mood – at half the usual price!

Easy readers in Italian - Giallo a Capodanno - cover image

“Sbrigati Alida, o arriveremo in ritardo alla festa di Capodanno!” ripete nervosamente Martina alla sua compagna di stanza. Alida sta sdraiata sul letto con un libro di Agatha Christie fra le mani. Si toglie pigramente gli occhiali da lettura e guarda fuori dalla finestra: “Nevica ancora, che incubo!”

It’s New Year 1970 and Martina’s all dressed up for the party, determined to enjoy it! But her roommate, Alida is more cynical:

“Ascolta: siamo bloccati dalla neve in un collegio in cui viviamo tutto l’anno. Dei duecento alunni che frequentano la scuola, solo sette (sette, porca miseria!) hanno dei genitori che non li vogliono tra i piedi nemmeno durante le feste. E noi siamo tra questi sette. Quindi puoi anche vestirti come Marilyn Monroe… ma rimani una disgraziata!”

Alida would rather read detective thrillers than pretend to have fun with just six fellow students. But who knows? Perhaps something interesting will happen?

  • .pdf e-book (+ audio available free online)
  • .mobi (Kindle-compatible) and .epub (other ebook readers) available on request at no extra charge – just add a note to the order form or email us
  • 8 chapters to read and listen to
  • Comprehension questions to check your understanding
  • Italian/English glossary of ‘difficult’ terms for the level
  • Suitable for students at upper-intermediate level or above
  • Download your Free Sample Chapter (.pdf)

Remember, this week ‘Giallo a Capodanno‘ is 50% discounted, so just £4.99 rather than the usual ‘easy reader’ ebook price of £9.99!

Buy ‘Giallo a Capodanno‘ just £4.99! | Free Sample Chapter (.pdf) | Catalog

Find more ebooks, organised by level, then type: A1 | A1/A2 | A2 | A2/B1 | B1 | B1/B2 | B2 | B2/C1 | C1 | C1/C2 | C2

How do I access my ebook?

When your order is ‘completed’ (normally immediately after your payment), a download link will be automatically emailed to you. It’s valid for 7 days and 3 download attempts so please save a copy of the .pdf ebook in a safe place. Other versions of the ebook, where available, cannot be downloaded but will be emailed to people who request them. There’s a space to do that on the order form – where it says Additional information, Order notes (optional). If you forget, or if you have problems downloading the .pdf, don’t worry! Email us at the address on the website and we’ll help. Also, why not check out our FAQ?

P.S.

Logo of EasyItalianNews.com

And as always, don’t forget to read/listen to today’s FREE bulletin of ‘easy’ Italian news.

The regular text + audio bulletins are a fantastic, FREE way to consolidate the grammar and vocabulary you’ve studied, as well as being fun and motivating!

Take a look at their website to get started on improving your Italian immediately!

To get all three text + audio bulletins of ‘easy’ news emailed to you each week, on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays, subscribe (they really are FREE) by entering your email address on this page and clicking the confirmation link that will be sent to you.

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Browse materials at your level:

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To feel more confident when speaking and interacting in Italian, try online lessons with an Italian mother-tongue teacher. Get help with grammar, or just talk together.

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We also run an Italian school in the historic center of Bologna, Italy:

Madrelingua: Italian language school in Bologna, Italy

Visit the school's website to find out more!

Join the conversation!

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