Calamaro is an Italian equivalent of the English word "squid."
Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is il ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is un, uno ("a, one").
The pronunciation is "KAH-lah-MAH-roh."
Yes. Calamari is the Italian word for squid.
Calamari .
"Squid" is an English equivalent of the Italian word calamaro.Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is il ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is un, uno ("a, one").The pronunciation is "KAH-lah-MAH-roh."
The word squid is spelled in Greek as kalamari. IN Latin the word squid is spelled as squid and in Italian it is spelled as calamaro.
There is no English word for cheers in Italian. Italian only uses the Italian word for cheers.
Calamari isn't slang. It's an Italian word for squid.
"Magnificent" in English is magnifico in Italian.
"idee" is the Italian word for "ideas" but in the singular, the Italian word is the same as the English one. I mean English - Italian = idea - idea :) get it?
calamari is the Italian word for squid. Not sure if they were the first to cook it though
"Vivo" in Italian translates to "alive" or "living" in English.
No. The 'i' ending indicates the word is a plural, probably in Italian. In fact, calamari is the Italian word for squids.The Spanish word for one squid is calamar, for two, calamaros.
"Exquisite" is an English equivalent of the Italian word squisito.Specifically, the Italian word is the masculine form of an adjecti