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Enjoying Your Vacation In Italy

December 6, 2009 by Vincent Brooks · Leave a Comment 




Vacationing is a pleasant time to release stress from work or studies. It’s an occasion wherein family, friends, and lovers will have some enjoyable time together. Several individuals go overseas to have their vacation. The recommended place to go is in the continent of Europe. The most visited country is of course Italy. Italy has a lot of tourist spots. Plenty of marvelous architecture, fashion, arts, etc. can be glimpse. Touring Italy will require you more than a week or so to stay. It would be painless for you to walk around Italy when you have a guide. With the aid of a tourist guide, you can visit many historical places and tourist spots.

It would be important that you carry light luggage. Why? Given that, there are many good qualities of fashion trends or styles in Italy. You might be lured to purchase one or more fashion items while you are vacationing. Italy is also excellent in their winery. You have to savor their wines and foods, they are splendid. You have to visit places with admirable architectures like the Piazza Del Campo in Siena, Leaning Tower of Pisa, St. Marks’s Basilica in Venice, Colosseum in Rome, and many more. You might fancy riding the well-known gondola of Venice. The outstanding magnificence of great monuments, gorgeous landmarks and ancient buildings are gratifying to experience.

Italy’s cities and metropolitan areas are Rome, Milan, Naples, Turin, Palermo, Genoa, Bologna, Florence, Catania, Venice, Bari, Verona, Messina, Padua, Trieste, Taranto, Brescia, Prato, Modena, and Reggio Calabria. Therefore, with these much places to visit it is much sensible to have a tourist guide. These gorgeous and historical cities are intriguing because these cities have a colossal involvement to our current civilization and lifestyle.

Italy is the home of well-known musicians and painters. These are namely Leonardo Da Vinci, Michelangelo, Donatello, Botticelli, Fra Angelico, Tintoretto, Caravaggio, Bernini, Titian, Raphael, Palestrina, Monteverdi, Alessandro Scarlatti, Corelli, Vivaldi, Paganini, Rossini, Verdi, Puccini, and many more. Italians adore playing sports like football, basketball, fencing, and ice hockey. Spaghetti is the traditional Italian cooking and this is so delicious.

If you want a valuable vacation with terrific time, spectacular views, and quest, you should visit Italy. Italy has all this astonishing places. People will be enthralled by the views that Italy could present to the tourist. Booking beforehand is necessary to avoid impediments. Getting in touch with an agency will be much uncomplicated and less difficulties. If you are fortunate, you might be able to gain some promos or price cuts. In peak seasons of Italy are also the moment where there are holidays or celebrations held in Italy. It would be immeasurable to experience such happening and find out more concerning Italian people.

Now, make your schedule and fly high to Italy. This is really great and wonderful to enjoy. A vacation in Italy is a fantastic experience of a lifetime. Have fun exploring the cities, savoring the scenery. Let every second you’re in Italy be a memorable moment. The beauty of Italy is perfect to experience and you can have a trip with your family and close friends.

I am going overseas to Rome to locate an antique vintage button so I had to learn Italian online quickly. Learn exactly what I did.

categories: italy,italian,rome,vacationing,vacation,tour,trip,journey,travel,fun

Learning The Italian Language

December 4, 2009 by Robertson Kunz · Leave a Comment 




There are many foreign languages to learn but if you are considering Italian, great! Italian is the descendent of Latin but is considered to have much simpler grammar than its ancestor. Additionally, Italian is used by over 60 million people so you will have plenty of people to practice with.

Reasons for learning Italian range from preparing for a trip to Italy to retiring on the Italian coast. Many others learn Italian because their ancestors came from Italy or because they want an advantage in applying for jobs. No matter what your reason may be for learning Italian, learning a new language is a very rewarding process.

One factor that may help speed up your studies of Italian is if you already have knowledge of another romance language like Spanish or French. Linguists consider these languages to be very similar and if you know one, you will find that you already know much of the vocabulary and grammar.

English speakers worldwide think of Italian as a very beautiful language. Unlike English, Italian puts a lot of emphasis on vowel sounds and many Italian words have vowel sounds at the end.

Tricky Italian points for English speakers include determining gender for nouns since words are either of the masculine gender or of the feminine gender. Additionally, verbs are conjugated with very different forms depending on the subject of the sentence.

However, comforting points include the fact that Italian word order is very similar to word order in English. Italian is also a subject-verb-object language like English so English speakers will find it very easy to begin creating new sentences in Italian.

Because so many people are interested in learning Italian, there is a great variety of Italian language learning programs for you to choose from. From audio programs to traditional textbooks, you will never be at a loss for materials to learn from.

Before you begin learning Italian, you should remember to sit down and make a serious commitment to learning the language. It can be a tough process but if you stick to it, you will be greatly rewarded. On the other hand, don’t just simply do grammar exercises and read textbooks, you should also enjoy yourself in Italian, too! Watch an Italian film or buy an Italian language CD. You will find that these activities can be some of the most rewarding when learning Italian.

Author Robertson Kunz has a language learning guide: fast language learning method. Italian learners: learn fluent Italian.

categories: Italian,Italy,learn Italian,education,reference,foreign language,uncategorized,communication,reference,college,school,travel,vacation,leisure

You Must Experience Venice

October 21, 2009 by Lisa McLaughlin · Leave a Comment 




You must experience Venice. Don’t listen to anyone who tells you it isn’t worth visiting, that it’s a tourist trap, that it smells.

Venice is romantic whether you go with a lover or a friend. It’s one of those cities that is charming and small and begs to be explored. There are no streets, at least for cars. The only way to get around Venice is by foot or a boat of some sort. Doesn’t that take you back in time and bring out the romantic in you? Don’t settle for stories from your travel friends or pictures in a book, go and experience Venice for yourself.

But isn’t it crowded?

Yes, Venice seems crowded… How could it not be? It’s one of the most popular destinations in Europe (with good reason we think). The crowds are compressed into the narrow streets, and there will be many more tourists during the day and the summer. Try to visit Venice in the spring or fall… or even winter, and you’ll find fewer crowds. The number of tourists may be smaller than for London or Paris, but those visitors are sharing what is really a small town.

Don’t the canals stink?

I can’t speak for the height of summer, but in the shoulder seasons, we’ve never found that the canals stink. We love strolling along them, taking the vaportti (the boats that serve as buses in Venice) or having a glass of wine at a canal side restaurant.

Isn’t it a city full of just tourists?

Yes, it is… but look at it this way… it’s been a city for and full of tourists for centuries! A century or two ago, a young gentleman’s “Grand Tour” wasn’t complete without time spent in Venice.

Isn’t Venice sinking?

Yes again. St. Mark’s Basilica is only two feet above sea level. That’s the lowest part of town. It’s the first to flood, and if you go in the winter, you might just see where they put boardwalks down for locals and tourists to get around. Even during the dry seasons, you will see the lagoon lapping up over the steps on the docks at St. Mark’s at high tide. There are major efforts by Italy and the world to save Venice because it is such a special place for all of us.

So do we have you convinced that you should ignore all those nay sayers? That you’ll fall in love with the city if you go and experience Venice? Think of the iconic things there are to see and do in Venice…. You really need to add them to your travel experiences.

Take a vaporetto on the Grand Canal. There is nothing like a journey down that frenetic “S” shaped waterway to make you know that you’re traveling… and traveling someplace special.

Get off the vaporetto at St. Mark’s Square and just absorb the sight of St. Mark’s Basilica and the Doge’s Palace. Feel the grandeur of St. Mark’s Square… and of course dodge the pigeons!

Walk the narrow streets to the Rialto Bridge. Yes, you might get lost… at least a little, but all streets really do lead to Rialto or St. Mark’s, so getting lost is part of the fun.

Venice is the sort of city that should be savored. There are so many things to see and do, but you can also fall in love with Venice without touring madly. Just stroll around, sit and observe, enjoy La Serenissima for what she is… a grand small city that shouldn’t be missed. Oh yes, you must experience Venice….. really.

See Venice In A Day

October 19, 2009 by Lisa McLaughlin · Leave a Comment 




Many people try to see Venice in a day. Time and money are often short when you’re traveling, so you want to get to as many places as you can. You really shouldn’t see Venice just in daylight…. a day and a night maybe. Or two nights and a day.

Venice really is a small town. You can walk right across it from the train depot to St. Mark’s Square in less than an hour… but that would be if you were just walking and not looking, and what you really want to do is stroll and SEE Venice…. La Serenissima herself is the main attraction.

The first time we went to Venice, we arrived by train at night and stayed near the train station. As soon as we settled in, we hit the street and started walking. To see Venice by street light is magical. Narrow winding streets…. Blue and red stripped “barber poles” holding boats and gondolas on the canals…. Little arching bridges to cross….

Don’t worry too much about your direction or getting lost…. Follow those signs that say “Per Rialto” or “Per St. Mark’s”… (Per Rialto means the direction for Rialto Bridge; Per St. Mark’s means… well, you get it…). Sometimes the signs “Per St. Mark’s” point in BOTH directions…. isn’t that wonderful! Wander where you want! All of the day trippers have gone home in the evening, and the narrow streets are all yours and so romantic!

Do what we did and wander all the way to St. Mark’s Square. If you don’t want to spring for an expensive drink at one of the cafes on the square, buy a gelato on a side street, then stand in the square and enjoy the dueling orchestras playing sentimental old favorites.

In the morning, try to see St. Mark’s Basilica and the Doge’s Palace. You probably won’t have time to go up the Campanile for the view with only a day, but it’s your choice…. if you only have a day, you’ll be back.

Stroll the streets, shopping along the way. There are lots of wonderful expensive things to buy in Venice, but there are some affordable Italian fashions too… and what better, easily packable souvenir could you ask for than some flamboyant Italian creation?

Find a table at one of the restaurants along the Grand Canal with a view of the Rialto Bridge for lunch. Yes, it’s touristy… it has been touristy for centuries, so you are in good company.

In the afternoon try to sample some of the art… at the Church of the Frari or the Scuola Grande di San Rocco. Or if you’re interested in the history of Venice, you could venture into the Museo Correr. If you want to see one of the grand palazzi that line the Grand Canal, see the Ca’ Rezzonico, the museum of 19th century Venice.

When you get all the way to one end of Venice, take a vaporetto to the other end… you’ll never tire of seeing Venice from the water, watching all those palazzi glide by. It takes on a different look in the morning, in the afternoon, at night.

Choose a romantic canal-side restaurant for dinner… or a wonderful little trattoria down an alley. Take a gondola ride before or after dinner. Who cares if it’s touristy? Your gondolier will sing for you, tell you where Marco Polo lived… and you’ll love it.

Go to a concert in the evening… there are chamber orchestras all over vying for your money. Or just go back to St. Mark’s square and listen to those dueling orchestras again.

Two nights and a day will let you see Venice in the short time you have… and by having one or two nights there, you’ll be able to savor it with fewer crowds….. how romantic!

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