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Italian Phrase

Ti offre corse illimitate.

/ti ˈof.fe ˈkor.se il.li.miˈta.te/
Meaning"It offers you unlimited rides."
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Meaning

The sentence means ‘It offers you unlimited rides.’ It is typically used to describe a service—such as a public‑transport pass, bike‑share subscription, or ride‑hailing plan—that lets the user travel as much as they want without extra cost per trip.

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When to use

Use this phrase when you want to highlight the benefit of a transport‑related product or service, especially in advertising, a conversation about subscription plans, or when explaining a new mobility option to a friend.

Grammar Breakdown

Tioffrecorseillimitate

1

Ti (indirect object pronoun)

‘Ti’ is the second‑person singular indirect object pronoun, meaning ‘to you’ or ‘for you’.

2

offre (verb offrire)

‘Offre’ is the third‑person singular present indicative of ‘offrire’ (to offer).

3

corse (noun, plural feminine)

‘Corse’ is the plural of ‘corsa’, a feminine noun meaning ‘ride, trip, run’. It matches the adjective that follows.

4

illimitate (adjective, plural feminine)

‘Illimitate’ is the plural feminine form of ‘illimitato’, agreeing with ‘corse’ and meaning ‘unlimited’.

🗨In Conversation

A

Hai sentito del nuovo abbonamento per la metro?

Did you hear about the new metro subscription?

Sì, ti offre corse illimitate!

Yes, it offers you unlimited rides!

B

Common Mistakes

  • Ti offri corse illimitate.

    ‘Ti offri’ means ‘you offer yourself’; the correct verb form is ‘offre’ (third‑person singular).

  • Ti offre corse illimitati.

    The adjective must agree in gender and number with ‘corse’ (feminine plural).

  • Tu offri corse illimitate.

    Using the second‑person singular ‘offri’ would imply ‘you offer’, not ‘it offers’.

Alternatives

  • Ti dà corse illimitate.

    It gives you unlimited rides.

  • Ti garantisce corse senza limiti.

    It guarantees you rides without limits.

  • Puoi fare corse illimitate.

    You can take unlimited rides.

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Cultural Tip

In Italy, unlimited‑ride tickets (abbonamenti ‘illimitati’) are common in big cities like Rome, Milan and Turin. The phrase is often heard in promotional posters, on website banners, and in radio ads. Keep the tone friendly but professional; using ‘ti’ signals an informal, direct address, which works well in marketing aimed at younger audiences.