Italian Phrase
Ci sarà una sessione di domande e risposte?
Meaning
The sentence asks whether a question‑and‑answer session is planned. It’s a polite, neutral way to confirm if the audience will have the chance to ask questions after a talk, workshop, or webinar.
When to use
Use this phrase when you are organizing or attending a presentation, conference, classroom lesson, or online webinar and you want to know if a Q&A segment is included in the agenda.
✦Grammar Breakdown
Cisaràunasessionedidomandeerisposte?
Impersonal "ci" with future "sarà"
"Ci" is an impersonal pronoun meaning "there"; combined with the future of "essere" (sarà) it forms "ci sarà" = "there will be".
Indefinite article with feminine noun
"una" agrees with the feminine noun "sessione" and signals that the session is not previously known.
Preposition "di" for content
"di" links the type of session to its content: "sessione di domande e risposte".
Plural nouns with conjunction
"domande" and "risposte" are both plural; the conjunction "e" simply joins them.
🗨In Conversation
Ci sarà una sessione di domande e risposte?
Will there be a Q&A session?
Sì, la terremo alla fine della presentazione.
Yes, we’ll hold it at the end of the presentation.
✕Common Mistakes
C'è una sessione di domande e risposte?
Use "c'è" for present existence; for future events you need "ci sarà".
Sarà ci una sessione di domande e risposte?
The pronoun "ci" must precede the verb, not follow it.
Ci sarà una sessione di domanda e risposta?
Both nouns should be plural because a session typically includes many questions and answers.
↔Alternatives
Ci sarà una sessione di Q&A?
Will there be a Q&A session?
Prevediamo una sessione di domande e risposte?
Do we anticipate a Q&A session?
Avremo una sessione di domande e risposte?
Will we have a Q&A session?
Ci sarà un momento per le domande?
Will there be a time for questions?
Cultural Tip
In Italian professional and academic events, a "sessione di domande e risposte" is almost always scheduled after the main talk. Using the impersonal "ci sarà" sounds formal and appropriate for both written invitations and spoken inquiries. Avoid the present "c'è" when you refer to future plans, as it can sound like you assume the session already exists.

