Quiz-Tree

Shopping (match)

If you've ever wanted to shop in Italy without second-guessing every word, this is the set that gets you there.

1. In the Store

At the checkout, in the fitting room, or pushing a trolley down the aisle: this quiz covers five essential Italian words for getting around a shop. Match each Italian word to its English meaning, complete sentences with the missing word, and translate full sentences to build your Italian retail vocabulary.Worth knowing: cassa means cash register and checkout counter in everyday Italian. You will hear andare alla cassa to mean heading to the till. Outside the shops, the same word also refers to a bank vault or cash box.
15 questions

2. Money & Payment

Do you know the Italian words for price, discount, and receipt? This quiz covers five key terms for handling payments in Italian shops. Match words to their English translations, fill in the blanks in Italian sentences, and translate complete phrases to strengthen your shopping vocabulary.One word worth noting: scontrino is the specific Italian term for a till receipt or fiscal receipt issued by a shop. It is different from fattura, which is a formal invoice used for business purchases and tax purposes.
15 questions

3. Clothing

Five Italian words for everyday clothing: this quiz focuses on essential wardrobe vocabulary for learners of Italian at any level. Drag and drop to match each Italian word with its English meaning, then complete sentences and full translations to practice using the words in real contexts.A small grammar note: vestiti is naturally plural in Italian and refers to clothing in general. For a single garment, Italian speakers name the specific item. In everyday speech, you say i miei vestiti for your clothes; there is no commonly used singular form with the same general meaning.
15 questions

4. Shopping Verbs 🔒

By the end of this quiz, you will know five Italian verbs essential for any shopping trip: how to buy, pay, search, return, and try things on. Work through three rounds of word matching, gap-fill sentences, and full translations to build confidence with these everyday action words.Like its equivalent in other Romance languages, provare covers two situations: trying on clothing in a fitting room and tasting or testing something. Context always makes the meaning clear: voglio provare questa giacca means trying it on, while voglio provare la zuppa means tasting the soup.
15 questions

5. Bags & Accessories 🔒

From the shopping bag to the price tag: this quiz builds your Italian vocabulary for the practical details of a retail trip. Learn the words for bag, size, label, brand, and special offer through three rounds of translation, gap-fill, and sentence practice.Two words here carry double meanings worth knowing. Borsa means shopping bag or handbag, but it is also the Italian word for stock exchange: la Borsa di Milano is the Milan Stock Exchange. Similarly, etichetta means price tag or product label, but it also refers to formal etiquette and dress code in social contexts.
15 questions

6. More Shopping 🔒

Whether you are browsing a street market or a modern shopping mall in Italy, this quiz gives you the vocabulary you need. Five Italian shopping words: market, shopping mall, store window, seasonal sale, and warranty. Practice through three rounds of translation, gap-fill, and full-sentence exercises.Keep in mind that saldi refers specifically to the seasonal sale period in Italy, typically after Christmas and in summer, when stores discount entire collections. It is not interchangeable with sconto, a reduction on a single item, or offerta, a specific promotional deal.
15 questions

You'll learn dozens of everyday shopping words in Italian, from basics like prezzo (price) and sconto (discount) to checkout essentials like contante (cash) and carta di credito (credit card). The set also covers clothing vocabulary, including giacca (jacket), jeans, and cappello (hat), along with words for the shopping experience itself, like saldi (sale), negozio (store), and borsa della spesa (shopping bag). These are the kinds of words that come up whether you're browsing a boutique in Florence or picking something up at a local market.

Each quiz asks you to match words and sentences, so you're building both reading and listening skills while seeing vocabulary used in real context. Sessions run about 5 minutes, making them easy to fit into a lunch break or a spare moment. You can repeat any quiz as often as you like until the words feel natural.

By the end, you'll be able to hear Accettiamo solo contante, understand it instantly, and know exactly what to do next. The goal is simple: real confidence with real words, in real situations.