Indirect Subject Pronouns (Dative: to Whom?)

Unstressed and stressed indirect subject pronouns exist in Italian.

unstressed stressed
singular mi a me me
ti a te you
gli a lui him
le a lei her
Le a Lei You
plural ci a noi us
vi a voi you
gli a loro them

Stressed subject pronouns are used,

if pronoun should be pointed out in particular:

A me non ha detto niente, a lui (invece) sì. He said nothing to me, but did to him.

after preposition:

Vieni da me? Will you come to me?

Indirect unstressed subject pronouns are in front of verb, stressed pronouns can be either in front of verb or subject.

Questo vestito mi sembra troppo caro. This dress seems to me too expensive.
Questo vestito a me sembra troppo caro. To me this dress seems too expensive.
A me questo vestito sembra troppo caro. To me this dress seems too expensive.

Negation non is in front of unstressed, but behind stressed pronoun.

Questo colore non le piace. She doesn’t like this colour.
A lei non piace questo colore. As for her, she doesn’t like this colour.
Grammar
Grammar - Espresso 1
Summary of Grammar Terminology
Alphabet
Pronunciation
Accentuation and Stress
Indicative and the Interrogative Sentences
Gender
Denotation of Persons
Suffixes
Forming
Specifications in Forming of Plural
Indefinite article
Definite article
Partitive article
Forms
Plural of Adjectives
Adjectives Ended in “-co/-ca”
Adjectives expressing colours
Placement of Adjective
Comparative
Superlative
Formation of Adverbs
Relationship between Adjective and Adverb
Comparative / Superlative of Adverbs
Personal pronouns
Subject Pronouns (Who?)
Indirect Subject Pronouns (Dative: to Whom?)
Direct Subject Pronouns (Accusative: Who? What?)
Pointing out Object
Pronominal Adverbs “ne” and “ci”
“Questo”
“Quello”
“poco”, “molto,tanto”, “troppo”
“Qualche”
“Tutto”
“Ogni”
Interrogative Words
Present Tense
The Verb “piacere”
Forming of the verb “essere”
Reflexive Verbs
Construction with “si”
“Passato Prossimo”
Constructions with Infinitive
Multiple Negation
Preposition “di”
The Preposition “a”
The Preposition “da”
The Preposition “in”
Preposition “con”
The Preposition “su”
Preposition “per”
The Preposition “fra/tra”
Next Prepositions
Preposition Expressions
Conjunctions
Cardinal numerals
Ordinal numerals
Date
List of Irregular Verbs
Summary of Grammar Terminology
Adjectives
Comparative
Expression of the Same Grade
Relative Superlative
Irregular Comparative and Superlative Forms
Possessive pronouns
Placement of Unstressed Subject Pronouns with an Infinitive
Subject Pronouns in Conjunction with “avere”
Verbs with a Direct and Indirect Object
Pronominal Adverbs “ne” and “ci”
The Relative Pronouns “che” and “cui”
“Nessuno / -a”
“Qualcuno/-a”
The Verb “sapere”
“Passato prossimo” of Reflexive Verbs
“Passato prossimo” of Modal Verbs
Conjuncture of Past Participle with Pronouns of Direct Object
Verbs with Auxiliary “avere” and “essere”
Imperfect
Different Use of “passato prossimo” and Imperfect
Use of the Verb “volere” in Imperfect
The Verbs “sapere” and “conoscere”
Conditional I
Imperative
Future Tense I
Present Conjunctive
Gerund
“Stare” + Gerund
Expressing a Gerund Condition
“Stare per” + Infinitive
Non-personal Use of Verbs
The Verb “servire”
Verbs with Pronouns
If-Clauses
“Mentre”
“Quando”
Next Conjunctions
Next Adverbial Time Indication
List of Irregular Verbs
Gender of the Nouns
Special Plural Forms
Agreement of Adjective with More Nouns
Comparison (irregular forms)
Negative Prefix “in-”
Adjectives Ending with “-bile”
“qualsiasi / qualunque”
“entrambi / entrambe”
Adverbs
Possessive pronouns
Pronominal Compounds
Pronominal Adverb “ci”
Constructions with “si-”
Impersonal Constructions
Placement of pronouns
“il quale / la quale / i quali / le quali”
“colui che”
“il cui / la cui / i cui / le cui”
“Trapassato prossimo”
“Futuro anteriore”
“Passato remoto”
Subjunctive
Sequence of Tenses in Subjunctive
Use of Subjunctive in Clauses with “che”
Use of Subjunctive in Main Clauses
Past Conditional
Conditional Clauses
Gerund
Infinitive
“Fare” + Infinitive
Present Participle
Passive
Passive Constructions with Verb “andare”
Indirect speech
Indirect question
Sequence of Tenses in Indicative
Verb “dovere” to Express Speculation
Transitive Verbs with Indirect Reflexive Pronoun
Special Verbs