115: Ponti buoni e ponti cattivi

115: Ponti buoni e ponti cattivi

Up next

223: Tanto caldo e bollicine. Tante bollicine.

...nella terra del prosecco. Oggi vi portiamo al fresco, o almeno cerchiamo di rinfrescarvi con un po' di prosecco e tanto verde, e colline. E poi? Beh dopo tutto questo bere, abbiamo bisogno di un po' di acqua. Ma che acqua? Liscia? Gasata? O, effervescente naturale? Ebbene si, ...  Show more

222: Pavoni "piantati in asso"! 🦚

E non tutti gli abitanti del paesino sono contenti della scelta dei pavoni. Ma non solo uccelli dai mille colori. Parliamo anche di cibo, o almeno, parliamo di dove si mangia il cibo e dove poi quindi si paga! A quanto pare in Italia ci sono non pochi problemi con "coperto" e "se ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

Italy's $12BN Bridge MYSTERY - #62
The World's Best Construction Podcast

This week we're heading to Italy - specifically, Sicily - to talk about the B1M's latest video on the Strait of Messina MEGA bridge. Will Italy ever build this engineering masterpiece?


Later in the episode, we cover:


<ul><li>Real Madrid’s revamped stadi ...  Show more

The Bridges of Denmark
How to Live in Denmark

<span style="font-size: 18pt;"><span class= "css-901oao css-16my406 r-poiln3 r-bcqeeo r-qvutc0">A country like Denmark, with so much coastline and water, needs a lot of bridges - and there have been 5 new colorful, stylish bridges built in Copenhagen</span><span class= "css-90 ...

  Show more

#70: How to Use the Words "Bene" and "Buono"
Italian Grammar Made Easy

The words “bene” and “buono” are often confused by Italian learners. “Bene” is an adverb and it never changes based on gender and number. “Buono” is an adjective that changes based on gender and number.


Start learning Italian today!


1. Download this episode ...

  Show more

Let's Buy London Bridge
Today In History with The Retrospectors

Oil tycoon Robert P. McCulloch purchased London Bridge for $2,460,000 on 17th April, 1968. The Victorian structure, which had been sinking into the River Thames at a rate of one inch every eight years, was then dismantled stone by stone and shipped to the USA, where it now bestri ...  Show more