Della torre is an Italian equivalent of the Spanish phrase de la torre.
Specifically, the word della combines the preposition di -- which is de ("of") in Spanish -- with the feminine singular definite article la ("the"). The feminine noun torre means "tower" in both Italian and Spanish. The respective pronunciation will be "DEL-la TOR-rey" in Italian and -- in Latin American* and peninsular Spanish -- "DEY-ya TOR-rey" at the beginning of a phrase or sentence and "THEY-ya TOR-rey" in the middle of a phrase or sentence.
*In Argentina and Uruguay, the sound for -llrespectively is "zh" and "sh."
torre de compras
"To my husband from your wife" in English is A mio marito da tua moglie in Italian and A mi marido de tu esposa in Spanish.
"I am crazy in love with you!" in English is ¡Estoy locamente enamorado de ti! in Spanish.
It can be translated to english as followed. Than nothing or never-mind.
"Of" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian word de. The preposition in question occurs in terms of familial titles -- from French and Spanish occupational influences on Italian bio-geography -- in place of the standard di("from," "of") in the modern language. The pronunciation will be "dey" in Italian.
"From" translated to "de" in Spanish. "De" is spelled deh-eh.
Raf De La Torre's birth name is Rafael De La Torre.
The word is "de."
The Italian equivalent of the Portuguese and Spanish phrase 'de nada' translates as the following: di niente. The Italian pronunciation is the following: Dee ni-EHN-tay. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'di' means 'from' or 'of'; 'niente' 'nothing'. The equivalent in English is translated as the following: 'You're welcome'; 'No problem'; 'It's nothing'; and 'Don't mention it'. In all four languages, the phrase may be in response to being thanked.
"On" in Spanish can be "en", o "encima de".
The population of Torre de' Passeri is 3,177.
Torre de Collserola was created in 1991.