Italian Phrase
Ti mostreranno delle opzioni.
Meaning
The sentence tells the listener that a group of people (they) will present some choices to them. It uses the future tense to indicate an action that will happen later.
When to use
Use this phrase when you want to reassure someone that a set of alternatives will be presented, such as in a meeting, during a software tutorial, or when a service is about to offer different plans.
✦Grammar Breakdown
Timostrerannodelleopzioni.
Ti (indirect object pronoun)
‘Ti’ is the informal second‑person singular indirect object pronoun, meaning ‘to you’ or ‘for you’.
Mostreranno (future simple)
‘Mostreranno’ is the third‑person plural future simple of ‘mostrare’ (to show). It translates to ‘they will show’.
Delle (partitive article)
‘Delle’ is the partitive article used before a plural noun to mean ‘some’. It combines ‘di’ + ‘le’.
Opzioni (plural noun)
‘Opzioni’ is the plural of ‘opzione’, meaning ‘option’ or ‘choice’.
🗨In Conversation
Non so quale corso scegliere.
I don’t know which course to choose.
Ti mostreranno delle opzioni.
They will show you some options.
✕Common Mistakes
Ti mostrerà delle opzioni.
‘Mostrerà’ is singular; the subject is plural (they). Use ‘mostreranno’.
Ti mostreranno a te delle opzioni.
The indirect object pronoun already includes the meaning of ‘to you’; adding ‘a te’ is redundant.
Le mostreranno delle opzioni.
‘Le’ is the formal pronoun; using it with ‘ti’ mixes registers.
↔Alternatives
Ti presenteranno alcune opzioni.
They will present you with some options.
Ti daranno delle scelte.
They will give you some choices.
Ti mostreranno qualche opzione.
They will show you a few options.
Cultural Tip
In informal conversation Italians prefer ‘ti’ for ‘you’, but in formal contexts you would use ‘Le’ (e.g., ‘Le mostreranno…’). Also, Italians often replace the future simple with the present tense for near‑future actions: ‘Ti mostrano delle opzioni.’ Both are correct, but the future adds a slight distance in time.

