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Italian Grammar Tuesday, 17th February 9 min read

Best app for Italian grammar practice (fast drills): what to choose + a 10‑minute routine

V

Vurbit Team

Language Expert

Best app for Italian grammar practice (fast drills): what to choose + a 10‑minute routine

There are a lot of “Italian apps” — but most of them are built for exposure (vocabulary, phrases, reading) more than automation (making grammar feel effortless under time pressure).

If your goal is fast grammar practice — the kind that helps you speak and write without stopping to think — you want an app that behaves like a gym: short sets, lots of reps, and clear feedback.

Table of Contents

If your biggest bottleneck is verb forms (and you want quick drills with immediate feedback), try Vurbit’s conjugation trainer.

What “fast grammar drills” actually are (and why they work)

“Fast drills” doesn’t mean mindless clicking. It means:

  • One target structure at a time (e.g., mi/ti/gli, ci vuole, passato prossimo with essere)
  • Many variations (same pattern, different words)
  • Immediate correction (you see exactly what was wrong)
  • Speed (you answer before you overthink)

This works because grammar becomes a habit, not a rule you recite. The best apps make you repeat the correct form until it feels normal.

Checklist: what the best Italian grammar practice app must have

Use this checklist before you commit to any subscription.

1) Drill-first design (not lesson-first)

Lessons are useful, but they’re not practice. For grammar to stick, the app needs a mode where you can do 30–100 quick reps on one topic.

2) Feedback you can learn from

“Wrong” is not feedback. Look for:

  • the correct answer (obviously)
  • a highlight of the error (agreement, preposition, pronoun position…)
  • the ability to retry the same item soon (spaced repetition)

3) Strong handling of verb forms

If the app is weak at conjugations, you’ll keep “knowing the rule” but failing in real time.

4) Control: choose what you practice

The best grammar practice feels targeted. You should be able to pick things like:

  • present vs passato prossimo vs imperfetto
  • direct vs indirect pronouns
  • common irregular verbs (and their high-frequency forms)

5) Low friction (you actually open it)

For daily drills, “best” often means: fastest to start, easiest to repeat.

So what’s the best app for Italian grammar practice?

For fast grammar drills specifically, the “best” app is the one that lets you:

  • target one grammar skill
  • do lots of reps quickly
  • repeat the exact weak spots tomorrow

If your main bottleneck is verb forms (which is extremely common), a conjugation-focused drill app will usually move the needle faster than a general course app — because it turns conjugations into muscle memory.

General Italian course apps (and gamified apps) can still be great for consistency and input. But if you’re asking “what’s the best app for grammar practice?”, it often means you want the drills to be the main event, not a side quest.

Which app is best for your goal? (quick match)

Different apps do different jobs. Here’s a simple way to choose:

  • You freeze on verb endings / irregulars → pick a conjugation drill app and do 5–10 minutes/day.
  • You want clear explanations + structured lessons → pick a course app and add a drill component.
  • You want to write better Italian → pick an app that supports sentence-level production and pair it with targeted drills (pronouns, prepositions, agreement).
  • You’re studying for an exam (B1/B2) → choose something that lets you practice typical exam grammar under time pressure: tenses, pronouns, connectors, congiuntivo.

The trick is not finding one perfect app — it’s covering both:

  • input (reading/listening)
  • output drills (fast grammar reps)

A 10‑minute daily grammar routine (copy/paste)

This is a routine you can do with any drill-friendly app. The point is speed + consistency.

Minute 0–2: warm-up (easy reps)

  • 10 easy conjugations (present tense) or 10 “fill the blank” sentences you’re already good at.

Minute 2–7: one target skill (hard reps)

Pick one:

  • passato prossimo with essere (agreement)
  • direct object pronouns (lo/la/li/le)
  • indirect object pronouns (mi/ti/gli/le/ci/vi)
  • prepositions (a/in/da)

Do 25–40 reps. Don’t switch topics mid-session.

Minute 7–10: speed round (same topic, timed)

Redo the same topic with a timer. Your job is to answer before you think in English.

Optional: write down 3 mistakes you made more than once. That becomes tomorrow’s topic.

Sample drills you can do today (with answers)

Here are quick drills you can use even without an app. Say the answer out loud, then check.

Drill 1: direct object pronouns (lo/la/li/le)

Replace the object with a pronoun.

  1. Vedo Marco. → Lo vedo.
  2. Conosci Maria? → La conosci?
  3. Compriamo le mele. → Le compriamo.
  4. Invito i miei amici. → Li invito.

Drill 2: passato prossimo with essere (agreement)

Choose the correct form.

  1. Maria è (andato/andata) a casa. → è andata
  2. Io e Luca siamo (arrivati/arrivate) tardi. → siamo arrivati
  3. Le ragazze sono (uscite/usciti) ieri sera. → sono uscite
  4. Tu sei (stato/stata) a Roma? → sei stato (male speaker) / sei stata (female speaker)

Drill 3: a vs in (places)

Pick a or in.

  1. Vado ___ Italia. → in Italia
  2. Vado ___ Roma. → a Roma
  3. Sono ___ ufficio. → in ufficio
  4. Sono ___ casa. → a casa

The 5 mistakes that make grammar apps feel “useless”

1) Topic-hopping every session

Grammar needs reps. If you do 2 questions of 15 topics, you’re always “reviewing” and never automating.

2) Practicing only what’s easy

If you never get items wrong, you’re not training the bottleneck. The sweet spot is: challenging but repeatable.

3) Doing recognition-only practice

Multiple choice feels good, but production is what you need for speaking/writing. Mix in fill-the-blank, typing, or speaking.

4) Not revisiting yesterday’s errors

The best “secret” is boring: do tomorrow what you got wrong today.

5) No minimum daily habit

5 minutes/day beats 60 minutes once/week. Choose an app you’ll actually open.

FAQ

Is Duolingo good for Italian grammar?

It can help you build consistency and see patterns. But if your goal is fast, targeted grammar drills (especially conjugations and pronoun placement), you’ll likely progress faster with a drill-first approach.

What’s the best app for Italian grammar at B1/B2?

At B1/B2, the biggest gains usually come from drilling high-frequency grammar under time pressure: common tenses, pronouns, connectors, and the most useful irregular verbs. Pair that with reading/listening for context.

How long does it take to improve Italian grammar with an app?

If you do 10 minutes/day of focused drills, you’ll often feel improvement in a couple of weeks — especially in speed and confidence. The exact timeline depends on what you practice (conjugations improve quickly with reps).

Takeaway: The best app for Italian grammar practice is the one that makes focused repetition easy. Pick one target skill, drill it fast, repeat tomorrow — and grammar starts to feel automatic.

Want to practice what you just learned?

Download Vurbit today to test yourself on these verbs and listen to the correct pronunciation.