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Italian Phrase

E anche per l'inglese.

/e ˈaŋke per ˈliŋɡwese/
Meaning"And also for English."
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Meaning

Literally 'And also for English.' The sentence adds English to a previously mentioned list of languages, subjects, or tasks, indicating that the same action or condition applies to English as well.

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When to use

Use this phrase when you are expanding a list of languages, courses, documents, or any other items and want to explicitly include English as an additional item.

Grammar Breakdown

Eancheperl'inglese.

1

E (conjunction)

Used to connect words, phrases, or clauses, equivalent to English 'and'.

2

anche (adverb)

Means 'also' or 'too', placed before the element it modifies.

3

per (preposition)

Introduces the purpose, benefit, or target, similar to English 'for'.

4

l'inglese (noun with article)

The name of the language English; the definite article contracts to l' before a vowel.

🗨In Conversation

A

Sto preparando il materiale per il francese e lo spagnolo.

I'm preparing the material for French and Spanish.

E anche per l'inglese.

And also for English.

B

Common Mistakes

  • E anche per inglese.

    The definite article is required before language names after a preposition.

  • E anche per l'inglese ,.

    Do not place a comma before the period; punctuation should be simple.

  • Anche per l'inglese.

    If you want to keep the conjunction, omit the leading 'E' only when the sentence stands alone.

Alternatives

  • Anche per l'inglese.

    Also for English.

  • E per l'inglese, inoltre.

    And for English, moreover.

  • E anche per l'inglese, se vuoi.

    And also for English, if you want.

it

Cultural Tip

In Italian, language names usually appear with the definite article (il, la, l') when they are the object of a preposition, e.g., per l'inglese, per il francese. However, in informal speech the article is sometimes dropped (e.g., per inglese). Keep the article in formal writing to sound natural and correct.