il, lo, l', i, gli
la, l', le
No, Latin does not have articles in its language structure.
The phrase 'articoli di giornale' is an Italian phrase. When this Italian phase is translated into the English language, it simply means newspaper articles.
No, the Japanese language does not have articles like "a," "an," or "the" as seen in English.
Italian language and literatute. :P
The Italians had Italian as their first language.
Actually, Italian is a language, not a race. It is the official language of Italy and is spoken by millions of people around the world. Italian people refer to their nationality as "Italian" rather than a race.
"Language" in English is lingua in Italian.
Renata Rosso has written: 'Living language Italian 2' -- subject(s): Italian language, Verb, Conversation and phrase books, English 'Italian Verbs Skill Builder' 'Living Language Italian dictionary : Italian-English, English-Italian' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, Italian language, English language, Italian
Italian = Italiano
Latin is the extinct language that is the mother of the Italian language. Italian developed from Vulgar Latin which was spoken in the region that is now Italy. Over time, Latin evolved into the distinctive language known today as Italian.
Italian music sung in Italian.
The phrase 'lingua d'Italia' is an Italian equivalent of 'language of Italy'.