Languages · Italy

Learn Italian with music

Conjugations that stick—not silent flashcard drills.

The most naturally musical Romance language.

Italian’s vowel-rich rhythm and clear spelling make it a natural fit for learning through song. Rhythmica turns verb patterns and high-frequency vocabulary into musical tracks—so you learn essere, avere, and key verbs the way your brain remembers best.

Available now

Why tables fade. Songs stick.

Conjugation table · silent

Six forms, no melody

  • -are, -ere, -ire endings with no sound hook
  • Irregulars and the congiuntivo pile on fast
  • Easy to forget once you close the app

Same pattern · on a loop

Forms land on the beat

  • Io, tu, lui repeat with rhythm and melody
  • Italian’s natural flow makes endings easier to hear
  • Review feels like replaying a track—not cramming

Sounds intuitive—until conjugation kicks in

Italian spelling and pronunciation are relatively consistent compared to French or English. The friction is verb forms: three classes (-are, -ere, -ire), irregular stems, passato prossimo with essere or avere, and the subjunctive in set phrases. Regular endings help, but common verbs like essere, avere, andare, and fare need repetition that actually sticks—and Italian already sounds musical, so setting forms to song is a natural fit.

What you get for Italian

Conjugation-first lessons designed for Romance-language learners.

Every major tense

Present, passato prossimo, imperfect, future, conditional, and subjunctive—for verbs you actually use.

-are, -ere, -ire

All three conjugation classes plus essential irregulars—essere, avere, andare, fare, and more.

One pattern, one song

Each conjugation map gets its own AI-generated track with forms locked to the beat.

Built-in review

Rhythm Journey XP and favorites so patterns stick between sessions.

Start with the verbs you’ll use every day

Dive into full conjugation maps for four essentials—or open the app and pick your tense.

Tips for learning Italian with music

  • Loop the same track until io / tu / lui feel automatic—Italian’s rhythm makes repetition easy.
  • Daily contact beats a weekend cram — five minutes or an hour of background listening both count.
  • Pair tracks with Italian music, film, or podcasts to hear forms in context.
  • Master essere and avere early—they’re auxiliaries in passato prossimo and everywhere else.

Practice Italian free

No download required on the web. Pick a tense, loop a track, and build the habit.

Open Italian in Rhythmica

Rhythmica is a strong complement to classes, tutors, or immersion—especially for mastering verb forms and high-frequency vocabulary. It won’t replace conversation, but it makes the drill layer less miserable.