Italian Phrase
Quale tecnologia ti interessa di più?
Meaning
The sentence asks the listener to name the technology that captures their curiosity the most. It is a polite, neutral‑tone question that can be used in both informal and semi‑formal settings.
When to use
Use this question when you’re discussing gadgets, software, or emerging fields – for example at a tech meetup, in a classroom debate about digital trends, or simply while chatting with a friend who loves tech.
✦Grammar Breakdown
Qualetecnologiatiinteressadipiù?
Quale (interrogative adjective)
‘Quale’ agrees with the noun it modifies in gender and number; here it modifies the feminine singular ‘tecnologia’.
interessare (verb)
The verb ‘interessare’ works like ‘to interest’ in English and takes an indirect object pronoun (ti, mi, gli, etc.).
ti (indirect object pronoun)
‘ti’ means ‘to you’; it is required with ‘interessare’ to indicate who is interested.
di più (comparative phrase)
‘di più’ follows a verb to express ‘more’ or ‘the most’ in a comparative sense.
🗨In Conversation
Quale tecnologia ti interessa di più?
Which technology interests you the most?
Mi interessa molto l'intelligenza artificiale, ma anche la realtà aumentata.
I'm very interested in artificial intelligence, but also in augmented reality.
✕Common Mistakes
Quale tecnologia ti piace di più?
‘Piace’ is used with direct objects; with ‘interessare’ you need the indirect pronoun ‘ti’.
Quale tecnologia ti di più interessa?
The comparative ‘di più’ must follow the verb, not precede it.
Quali tecnologia ti interessa di più?
‘Quale’ does not change for plural; use ‘quali’ only when the noun is plural.
↔Alternatives
Che tecnologia ti piace di più?
Which technology do you like the most?
Qual è la tecnologia che ti affascina di più?
What is the technology that fascinates you the most?
Quale campo della tecnologia ti attira di più?
Which field of technology attracts you the most?
Cultural Tip
In Italian, ‘interessare’ is preferred over ‘piacere’ when you want to talk about intellectual curiosity rather than simple liking. Remember to keep the indirect object pronoun (ti, mi, gli…) right before the verb. In the north of Italy you’ll also hear the shorter ‘Che tech ti piace di più?’ in very informal speech.

