Additionally, paste this code immediately after the opening tag:

VerbSquirt Italian Verbs

Get the FREE version of the most sophisticated Italian verb app on Google Play. Unlimited different quest...

Free

Store review

Get the FREE version of the most sophisticated Italian verb app on Google Play.

Unlimited different questions on 300 of the most used verbs, in all the major tenses.

Improving your Italian is a fun and rewarding activity, but learning Italian verbs can be a pain.

For English speakers learning their first foreign language, the burden of learning verb conjugations can make communication impossible and attempts at conversation frustrating.

For centuries, effective learning of Italian has involved repetition and self-testing of the different verb conjugations by the student in his own time. Now this process has been brought up to date with VerbSquirt.

Included in the free version:

Conjugation of 300+ verbs in the most important tenses for everyday communication.

Closest English translation of all conjugations of those verbs.

Integrated learning exercises to test your knowledge of the different verbs and tenses and to track your progress

Over 1,000,000 different test questions possible for each verb/conjugation

How VerbSquirt works

The need to conjugate Italian verbs on the fly can make spontaneous conversation difficult for even intermediate speakers of Italian.
VerbSquirt’s approach is to simulate the rapid recall and listening skills needed for a conversation involving Italian verbs, and to help the user improve those skills.
Instead of asking for conjugations based on a particular tense, VerbSquirt challenges the user to find the closest possible Italian translation for the English action they want to describe, or to identify the closest English translation for a particular action in Italian.
Once fluency improves, VerbSquirt helps the user gain familiarity with the different rules of conjugation for Italian verbs, and with the exceptions, leading to a better understanding of the subtleties of the language.

Last update

March 4, 2020

Read more