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Italian Phrase

Quando è la tua prossima lezione?

/ˈkwan.do ɛ la ˈtu.a ˈprɔs.si.ma leˈt͡sjo.ne/
Meaning"When is your next lesson?"
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Meaning

A polite way to ask someone about the date or time of their upcoming lesson. It can refer to a school class, a private tutoring session, a music lesson, or any scheduled learning activity.

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When to use

Use this question when you want to coordinate schedules with a teacher, a classmate, or a language‑exchange partner. It works both in formal settings (talking to a professor) and informal ones (asking a friend about a piano lesson).

Grammar Breakdown

Quandoèlatuaprossimalezione?

1

Quando

Interrogative adverb meaning “when”. It starts a question about time or date.

2

è

Third‑person singular present of the verb *essere* (to be). Used to link the subject with a time expression.

3

la

Feminine singular definite article, agrees with the noun *lezione*.

4

tua

Possessive adjective meaning “your”. It must match the gender and number of the noun it modifies.

5

prossima

Adjective meaning “next”. It also agrees in gender and number with *lezione*.

6

lezione

Feminine noun meaning “lesson”. Common in school, music, language‑learning contexts.

🗨In Conversation

A

Quando è la tua prossima lezione?

When is your next lesson?

È domani alle dieci di mattina.

It’s tomorrow at ten in the morning.

B

Common Mistakes

  • Che è la tua prossima lezione?

    Use *Quando* for “when”. *Che* means “what/which” and does not form a correct time question.

  • Quando è il tua prossima lezione?

    The article and possessive must agree with the feminine noun *lezione*: use *la tua*, not *il tua*.

  • Quando è la tua prossimo lezione?

    The adjective *prossimo* must match the gender of *lezione*; use *prossima*.

Alternatives

  • Quando hai la prossima lezione?

    When do you have your next lesson?

  • A che ora è la tua prossima lezione?

    At what time is your next lesson?

  • Qual è la data della tua prossima lezione?

    What is the date of your next lesson?

it

Cultural Tip

In Italian, you can ask about the day (*quando*) or the exact hour (*a che ora*). Both are perfectly natural, but *a che ora* sounds a bit more precise. Remember to keep the verb *essere* in the third person singular (*è*) when you’re referring to the lesson itself, not to the person (*hai*).