Is it hard learning italian?
Italian is nowhere near as hard as some of the other languages out there. Italian grammar is similar to the other Romance languages (Spanish, French, Portuguese, Romanian), there’s a lot of different verb endings to know. In fact, you’ll probably find this in many languages besides English. Nouns have two genders: masculine and feminine. Adjectives have to agree with the nouns they modify. One quirk about Italian is that you don’t add -s to the end of nouns to make them plural. Instead the final vowel is changed, if there is one. As for pronouncing, once you learn the rules to pronouncing Italian words, you can pretty much predict how they are pronounced by their spelling, unlike English in many cases. Italian is also great because it shares a hefty number of cognates with English. A lot of English words that come from Latin have equivalents in Italian that look similar. So, for example, if you see the Italian word “creare” you can guess that it means “create”. Or if you see “esaminare