Subject-verb-objectare the grammatical arrangements of the English and Italian languages.
Specifically, the person or thing that is responsible for the action generally comes first in the sentence. The action is revealed next. The person or thing impacted by the action occurs last in both languages if it is a case of nouns. If it is a matter of object pronouns, English will place the object pronoun after the verb whereas Italian - except when the verb assumes the imperative (command) form, in which case the object pronoun is like English in occurring afterward - will put the object pronoun between the subject and the verb.
simialar ones
2 languages : italian and english
"(Grammatical) tense," "pace," "rhythm," "time," and "weather" are English equivalents of the Italian and Portuguese word tempo. The above-mentioned form serves as a masculine singular noun in both languages. The respective pronunciations will be "TEM-po" in Italian and "TEM-poo" in Cariocan and continental Portuguese.
italian and english
the language demi lovato speak is english.
It is still Garry.All names in English would still be the same in Italian and other languages
italian english
Hindi, English, Italian
He speaks English and Italian
French Italian English
2 Languages He speaks English and Italian He speaks Italian because he has lived there for seven years.
This might depend on your mother tongue, and on your knowledge of other languages. Italian would usually be easier for native English speakers - given that there are many shared grammatical structures, word-roots and even spelling/pronunciation similarities. However, if you have any exposure to other Asian languages, one might find Japanese relatively easy.