Practice Meeting Someone New in İtalyanca
First impressions in İtalyanca are built from small details — the right greeting, the right register of 'you', whether to use a kiss-on-the-cheek or a handshake. This scenario rehearses introducing yourself, asking the basic getting-to-know-you questions ('Where are you from?', 'What do you do?'), and navigating the moment when conversation could continue or fizzle. You'll practise the friendly-but-polite register most İtalyanca speakers default to with strangers, and the natural follow-up questions that turn an introduction into an actual conversation.
Sample İtalyanca conversation
Ciao! Piacere di conoscerti. Mi chiamo Linguarudo. Come ti chiami?
Hello! Nice to meet you. My name is Linguarudo. What's your name?Piacere di conoscerla. Mi chiamo Alex.
Nice to meet you. My name is Alex.Piacere di conoscerti, Alex! Di dove sei?
Great to meet you, Alex! Where are you from?Sono di qui.
I'm from here.Oh, che bello! Allora conosci bene la zona. Che lavoro fai?
Oh, wonderful! So you know this area well. What do you do for work?Sono studente.
I'm a student.
Ne öğreneceksin
- Greet someone with the right level of formality
- Introduce yourself with name, origin, and purpose
- Ask the basic getting-to-know-you questions
- Show interest with follow-up questions and reactions
- Politely exchange contact details or end the chat
Sıkça sorulan sorular
Should I use formal or informal İtalyanca when meeting someone new?
It depends on age and context — but as a learner, defaulting to formal is safer. The other person will invite you to switch. The scenario rehearses both registers.
What's a good icebreaker in İtalyanca?
Asking about the local area or their work usually works. The scenario gives you the natural follow-up question patterns.
How do I exchange names without it feeling awkward in İtalyanca?
The İtalyanca script is gentler than the English 'What's your name?'. We use a softer construction in the scenario.
What if I forget the person's name in İtalyanca?
There's a polite phrase — the İtalyanca equivalent of 'Sorry, what was your name again?' — that's the universal recovery line.