SHARE
COPY LINK

LA BELLA VITA

La Bella Vita: Tipping rules, Italian habits and the most useful verb tenses

From the habits people pick up after moving to Italy to the Italian grammar you really need, weekly newsletter La Bella Vita offers you an essential starting point for eating, talking, drinking and living like an Italian.

La Bella Vita: Tipping rules, Italian habits and the most useful verb tenses
Shopping at the weekly market has probably become essential if you've lived in Italy for any length of time. Photo by Matteo Badini on Unsplash

La Bella Vita is our regular look at the real culture of Italy – from language to cuisine, manners to art. This new newsletter will be published weekly and you can receive it directly to your inbox, by going to newsletter preferences in ‘My Account’ or follow the instructions in the newsletter box below.

Italian grammar can be a lot to get to grips with, particularly the number of verb tenses: Italian has a total of 21 tenses, divided into two forms, plus a total of seven moods, also split into two categories.

This can be a bit much if you’re still perfecting your coffee order.

All of these tenses are still used in Italy (while in English, some of our 12 tenses are rarely used). But how many of these forms do you really need to know, at least at first? How many will you actually use in everyday life?

While your Italian language teacher will no doubt say “all of them” – piano piano, you’ll get there eventually – some tenses are going to come in far more immediately useful than others.

So if you want to start speaking Italian right away, we’ve narrowed the list down to the five most useful tenses that you can’t get by without.

Which Italian verb tenses are the most useful?

Moving to any new country is guaranteed to bring changes to your lifestyle. But what are the most common new habits people pick up after moving to Italy?

As well as healthier eating, finding more time to relax, and getting more fresh air and exercise, readers admitted that after adapting to the Italian lifestyle they now find themselves “eating an entire pizza guilt-free” and “not taking traffic lights too literally”. Here’s what else you told us:

Eating well, driving badly, and daily naps: The habits you pick up in Italy

Speaking of stereotypically Italian habits, you’ve no doubt heard all about the reputation Italians have for being habitually late. But is this always true? How late are we talking? And what should you do when an Italian friend leaves you hanging?

We looked at why, when and how you’ll probably need to switch to ‘Italian time’ yourself if you want to keep your cool.

EXPLAINED: How late is it usual to be in Italy?

Tipping etiquette in Italy: what are the rules?

Tipping etiquette in Italy: what are the rules? Photo by FABIO MUZZI / AFP

And there’s a lot of confusion and contradictory advice out there about tipping in Italy, whether at a restaurant or in a taxi. Of course, you can tip whatever you like and it will always be appreciated – but what is actually expected? Ten percent? Twenty? Nothing at all? 

We’ve got a quick overview of what you need to know about Italian tipping etiquette.

What are the rules on tipping in Italy?

Finally, if you’re not in Italy right now or can’t visit as often as you’d like to, reading books that transport you here might be the next best thing.

Here’s an article from the archives with some inspiration for lovers of literature, travel and history, featuring five of the best old Italian travel books – from classics that are still easily found to rarer volumes worth hunting down.

Travelling back in time: Five of the best old Italian travel books

Remember if you’d like to have this weekly newsletter sent straight to your inbox you can sign up for it via Newsletter preferences in “My Account”.

Is there an aspect of the Italian way of life you’d like to see us write more about on The Local? Please email me at [email protected].

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.
For members

LA BELLA VITA

La Bella Vita: Every step of an Italian dinner and are dialects really dying out?

From the ins and outs of a traditional Italian dinner to how the use of Italian dialects is changing, our weekly newsletter La Bella Vita offers you an essential starting point for eating, talking, drinking and living like an Italian.

La Bella Vita: Every step of an Italian dinner and are dialects really dying out?

La Bella Vita is our regular look at the real culture of Italy – from language to cuisine, manners to art. This newsletter is published weekly and you can receive it directly to your inbox, by going to newsletter preferences in ‘My Account’ or following the instructions in the newsletter box below.

Less elaborate than French cuisine, Italy’s cucina uses simple ingredients and tends to prioritise fresh local produce over complex cooking techniques. 

But while it may not be as sophisticated as its French counterpart, even an informal Italian dinner is still a multi-course affair, often stretching over several hours and involving various stages. 

If you’re invited into an Italian home for dinner, or are planning an Italian-style dinner yourself, here’s a useful rundown of the courses you can generally expect from a typical cena.

Antipasto to amaro: What to expect from every step of an Italian dinner

It’s a common scenario for foreign nationals in Italy: you’re at the local bar-pasticceria sipping on your frothy morning cappuccino and savouring a cornetto when you suddenly get the feeling that the Italian customers you’re overhearing aren’t actually speaking Italian at all.

Well, that may be because they aren’t.

From Veneto to Sicily, almost every corner of the country has its own regional dialect, though ‘dialect’ isn’t always the most appropriate way to describe Italy’s dialetti as many have evolved separately from what we know today as Italian and could be seen as languages of their own.

Though dialects were once preferred among locals over ‘standard’ Italian, even in formal settings, official statistics have shown for years now that only around 14 percent of Italians still speak their dialect at home. 

View of Naples in the summertime

In Naples and other parts of southern Italy, dialect is still widely used. But something curious is happening to the way many Italians use their local languages. Photo by Diego Mattevi on Unsplash

So does that mean that Italian dialects are disappearing for good, or are they simply evolving? Our writer Silvia Marchetti looks into how their use is changing in the article below.

Are Italy’s many dialects dying out – or just evolving?

Italian counts around 67 million native speakers around the world, and the way the language is used by these speakers isn’t always what visitors or new learners expect. 

Confusion often surrounds words that have crept out into the big wide world and taken on new meanings elsewhere.

We’ve put together eight words which you may never hear native speakers use (or at least not with the meaning you might expect).

Eight Italian words native speakers would never use

SHOW COMMENTS